piper donlin final thesis - uio
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The Power of Food: The Ojibwe Food Sovereignty Movement
A Movement Towards Regaining and
Restoring Indigenous Lifeways Through Food in Minnesota
Piper Elizabeth Donlin
Master thesis in Culture, Environment and Sustainability
Centre for Development and Environment
UNIVERSITY OF OSLO
May 2015
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© Piper Donlin
2015
The Power of Food: The Ojibwe Food Sovereignty Movement
Piper Elizabeth Donlin
http://www.duo.uio.no/
Print: Reprosentralen, University of Oslo
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Abstract
This thesis is concerned with the significant cultural, physical, and emotional losses of
the Ojibwe people and their current efforts to use food as a means of regaining their
sovereignty and self-sufficiency. In Ojibwe communities across the state of Minnesota,
many active players are dedicated to preserving and sustaining Ojibwe food traditions in
order to recover the cultural practices and norms that were lost, or forgotten, during the
time of colonization.
This ethnographic research study was conducted to observe and participate in the
community-based projects of food. I achieved this through conducting in-depth
interviews with key players, attending meetings, volunteering at non-profit
organizations, and participating in all things food related within these communities;
from planting and weeding, to harvesting and eating. Using low-level theoretical frames
and community based examples, I will answer the following questions:
Why is food such an effective communicator in Ojibwe communities?
How is it being used to communicate the goals of the Ojibwe people?
I answer these questions using a series of theoretical ideas, including agency, notions of
time, resistance, place and space, and finally, participation. I stray a bit from the formal
structure expected in a master’s thesis because I feel that a more fluid story-like
approach is more conducive to my topic and the nature of Native culture. That being
said, the structure is as follows. I begin with the historical losses of the Native peoples
of the United States, and end with their empowered visions for the future. I examine
their efforts through a historical lens, exploring notions of connectedness, sacredness,
and relatedness, before examining the “projects of agency,” from small scale cooking
classes, to legal efforts to regain land and rights. All of these are dedicated to
preserving and sustaining Ojibwe ways of life. While terms like, “regaining, returning,
and revitalizing” are essential to communicating the significance of the cultural past, it
became clear that the communities in question are moving into new paradigms of
political process, participatory forms of government, and culturally appropriate means
of food production, education, and economic self-sufficiency. They take into account
their past losses and cultural heritage while incorporating new ideas and players into
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their present. All of this is done with the hopes of a positive self-sufficient future in
mind. This thesis is my attempt to understand and learn from these Ojibwe struggles and
triumphs.
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Acknowledgements
Without the help and support of many people, I would not have been able to complete
this thesis.
First, I would like to express my deep gratitude and appreciation for my advisor, Sidsel
Roalkvam who gave me encouragement and guidance throughout this process. The time
and energy she spent working with me will be forever appreciated.
I would like to thank the communities and organizations that allowed me to participate,
observe, ask questions, and listen in on their efforts. The people I met during my time
in the field renewed my faith in humanity by showing me kindness and gracious
hospitality. To the Drouillard family, for taking me in to their home during my first
days in the field and offering me a beautiful home cooked meal, great conversation, and
advice for the rest of my trip. To Bob Shimek, for taking the time out of his busy
schedule to talk with me, invite me to events, and for making me feel welcome in a new
community. To Zachary Paige who shared his experiences and keen interest in seeds
with me. To Simone Senogles, who inspired much of this work. To Dream of Wild
Health and their wonderful staff for allowing me to spend many days working and
eating on their beautiful farm – this place will always hold a special place in my
thoughts. Finally to the kind strangers who, on multiple occasions, showed me the way
when I was lost (both physically and mentally).
I would like to thank my family in Minnesota for helping me find my feet and for
keeping my spirits up – there’s nothing like returning to your own bed after being in the
field. To my grandparents, who inspired my academic journey. To my parents who
offered their endless support during the experience. To Tex and Amalfi Hawkins, Rick
Brandenburg and Ellen Hawkins for offering me their homes and insightful knowledge
into their experiences in anthropology, Native American studies, and sustainable
agriculture. Lastly, to my wonderful partner, Carl Frederik Kontny, who was there
through thick and thin, offering advice, support, and of course chocolate.
Piper Donlin
May 5, 2015
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Table of contents
1 Introduction ............................................................................................................... 1
1.1 The Foodshed Mapping...................................................................................... 1
1.2 Livelihoods on the Reservation: Motivation and Rationale ............................... 6
1.2.1 Health and Nutrition ................................................................................... 6
1.2.2 Education .................................................................................................... 8
1.2.3 Land Access and Housing ........................................................................... 8
1.3 Research Questions ............................................................................................ 9
1.4 Concepts and Definitions ................................................................................. 10
1.5 Shaping the Conceptual Framework ................................................................ 17
1.6 In the Field: Methodologies and Groundwork ................................................. 23
1.7 Roadmap .......................................................................................................... 29
2 The Collective Nature of Things ............................................................................ 31
2.1 The Lost Past .................................................................................................... 35
2.1.1 Signing Away the Past: Treaties ............................................................... 36
2.1.2 Loss of a Generation: Boarding schools ................................................... 40
2.1.3 The Loss of the Ancestors ........................................................................ 43
2.2 Loss of Relations .............................................................................................. 47
3 The Case of Wild Rice: Bringing the Past into the Present .................................... 49
3.1 Traditional and Communal Significance ......................................................... 50
3.2 Wild Rice: The Sacred Staple .......................................................................... 53
3.3 Processing Wild Rice ....................................................................................... 55
3.4 Connectedness to Land and Spirit .................................................................... 56
3.5 Horizon of the Future ....................................................................................... 59
4 Transformative Power of Food: The Role of Non Profits and the Grassroots
Movement ....................................................................................................................... 61
4.1 Dream of Wild Health: The Creation of a Sacred Space ................................. 64
4.1.1 Seed Savers and Seed Keepers ................................................................. 65
4.1.2 Knowledge Sharing and Youth Education: The Making of a “Garden
Warrior” .................................................................................................................. 67
4.1.3 Distributing the Dream ............................................................................. 71
4.2 White Earth Land Recovery Project: The Creation of a Political Space ......... 73
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4.2.1 Environmental Stewardship and Access: The Seed Libraries ................... 75
4.2.2 Economic Resiliency: Native Harvest ....................................................... 77
4.2.3 Cultural Preservation: Indigenous Farm to School Program .................... 78
4.2.4 Land Preservation ...................................................................................... 81
4.3 Their Collective Agency ................................................................................... 82
5 Envisioning New Horizons ..................................................................................... 85
5.1 Resisting the System ......................................................................................... 86
5.2 Using Places to Create Spaces .......................................................................... 90
5.3 Extending Opportunities: New Modes of Participation ................................... 93
5.4 All Things Considered ...................................................................................... 95
6 Conclusions ............................................................................................................. 97
Bibliography .................................................................................................................. 101
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List of figures
Figure 1: White Earth Foodshed Mapping ....................................................................... 4
Figure 2: Shades of Agency ............................................................................................ 21
Figure 3: Initial Mapping of Field and Players (Donlin fieldnotes) ............................... 26
Figure 4: Hope and Ernie Dream of Wild Health ........................................................... 33
Figure 5: Representation of Treaties and Ojibwe Migration (Donlin Fieldnotes) .......... 37
Figure 6: Symbolic Petition brought to Washington by Ojibwe delegates in 1849
(Wisuri and Peacock) ...................................................................................................... 38
Figure 7: Grand Portage Ojibwe Boarding School, 1889 (Wisuri and Peacock) ........... 41
Figure 8: Traditional Diet of the Northwestern Ojibwe ................................................. 51
Figure 9: Names of Months for Northeastern Ojibwe .................................................... 53
Figure 10: Shades of Agency and Projects ..................................................................... 62
Figure 11: Group of Volunteers with Hope Flannigan and Diane Wilson (Right) ......... 64
Figure 12: White Earth Land Recovery Project office ................................................... 73
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Acronyms
WELRP: White Earth Land Recovery Project
DOWH: Dream of Wild Health
BIA: Bureau of Indian Affairs
DNR: Department of Natural Resources
FDPIR: Food Distribution Program for Indian Reservations
USDA: United States Department of Agriculture
FAO: Food and Agriculture Organization
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1 Introduction
1.1 The Foodshed Mapping
On August sixth, 2014, I was invited to attend a “foodshed mapping” on the White
Earth Indian Reservation in Northwestern Minnesota. I was not, at the time, familiar
with the term “foodshed,” which was coined by Kloppenburg at the University of
Wisconsin Madison. The term parallels that of a watershed, and as he puts it, describes
the socio-geographical space from which our food comes from. “The foodshed can
provide a place for us to ground ourselves in the biological and social realities of living
on the land and from the land in a place that we call home” (Kloppenburg et.al. 1996).
With that in mind, I set out in my little red Prius from my home in St. Paul to find the
White Earth Land Recovery Project (WELRP), a non-profit organization situated in the
small town of Callaway, Minnesota on the White Earth Indian Reservation. Located in
Northwestern Minnesota, White Earth, or Gaa-waabaabiganikaag, meaning ‘where
there is abundance of white clay,’ is settled between three distinct biomes (Indian
Affairs Council 2012). With the Red River Valley to the west boasting broad flatlands
and immensely fertile soil, deep coniferous forest to the northeast known for ancient
White Pines, and deciduous forest stretching southeast across much of the state, White
Earth is uniquely diverse in its flora and fauna. With small fragments of ancient
remnant prairie, groves of sprawling Oak Trees, and low-lying Tamarac Bogs, it is a
truly stunning landscape. I, a little nervous about being an outsider from the city in a
small rural community, arrived at the White Earth Land Recovery Project hoping to
meet some of my contacts and see the facility. The White Earth Land Recovery Project
formed in 1989 in response to land-based rights struggle. Eventually I met Bob
Shimek, the current Executive Director of WELRP. A tall man with a ponytail and a
wide-brimmed hat, Bob’s presence is easily felt – he is methodical and deliberate when
he speaks, and it is clear that he is well respected in the community. Despite being
slightly intimidating, Bob has a good sense of humor and a big laugh. Bob showed me
around the facilities and the yard out back, where various old chairs and equipment
were scattered around the yard, as well an old white Mercedes. After the tour, Bob
introduced me to one of the interns, and asked if I would be willing to help her set up
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for the foodshed mapping at the community center. I agreed and we got in our cars and
headed to the Village of White Earth. As a native of the suburbs and a self-proclaimed
urban dweller, I was not prepared for the length of distances between communities in
rural Minnesota. After twenty minutes of driving, we arrived at a new building called
the White Earth Community Center. We began setting up in a large seminar room filled
with small round tables. I was in charge of snack and coffee set up, which consisted of
opening several bags of potato chips and pork rinds, which are delicious crunchy little
salty pork flavored goodies, opening the plastic package containing small single serving
pies with cherry filling and donuts. I then began making coffee, which was fair trade
and had come from the WELRP offices, and putting out creamer and some sugar
packets.
Eventually attendees began trickling in, grabbing paper plates full of treats and pouring
themselves coffee before settling in for the meeting. The group consisted of about 15
people, some community members, two researchers from Brown University, a member
of the tribal liaison, a woman from the White Earth Community College, and several
employees of WELRP, including Bob Shimek. One woman came from the Leech Lake
Band for the meeting. An active member in her own community, she had a lot of
positive things to say about foodshed mapping. She had been to a conference earlier in
the year and heard a man speaking about food sovereignty.
He said we’re 25 years away from regaining food sovereignty – I might
live to see that! I keep telling people that because it’s an encouraging
thought. It’s tangible and people are motivated to find things to do right
now instead of waiting. It’s happening, things are changing and we’re
getting better at remembering what we used to do (participant: meeting
06.08.14).
After the introductions, Bob began speaking about the project and the goal of the
meeting. “Sorry, I was just getting my dose of junk food here.” while smiling and
grabbing an assortment of food from the table. “I just have to apologize; the person
who was supposed to bring the healthy food didn’t show up so we’re stuck with the
junk food.” People chuckled and he began:
This project is part of a goal of getting to the point where we can start to
think about the bigger picture of food sovereignty, food security, and food
safety. Clearly when we talk about food, we know that we are what we eat
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but it’s also our first step. I believe that in order to know where we’re
going, we have to look back. What do we have that’s available in terms of
local foods? What if the global food grid shut down at 8 AM tomorrow
morning? Then what? Where does that leave us? We are vulnerable and
fossil fuel dependent. With the coming of the white man and the
reservations, there’s been an increased dependency on what I call the
modern welfare system. Some of that was forced on us when they hauled
our kids off to boarding schools and stole our land but the food is still out
there and that’s the point. It’s good as long as it works but for those of us
that want to look for alternatives, that’s what foodshed mapping is all
about. What do we imagine are the elements of a localized foodshed?
(Shimek: meeting 06.08.14).
They began by determining the radius of the foodshed, which was set at the size of the
reservation. At 2,831 square kilometers, the White Earth Reservation is the largest
reservation in the state of Minnesota by landmass (Indian Affairs Council 2012). People
started describing elements such as gardens, access to wild edibles, education of youth
and knowledge sharing by elders, seed saving, ecosystem support, land access and
policies. The intern brought up valuable points such as meeting the dietary needs of the
community, assessing the population in terms of how many elders, children, and low-
income members there are who need help accessing food. She noted the importance of
infrastructure and posed questions such as; how do we support those who need help?
Where can food be stored or frozen? What needs to be built? Who has knowledge they
are willing to share and who has the resources necessary? I was interested to hear that
knowledge sharing was noted as a significant aspect of the mapping, as I hadn’t heard
that brought up in other foodshed assessments. This struck me as one of the differences
between Native and non-native communities, the sharing and acknowledgement of
knowledge holders as a valuable part of the community.
With those questions in mind, they began to map local food sources, production sites,
and distribution areas on the White Earth Reservation Map. They started with what was
already present: farmer’s markets in the area. Bob stood in the front of the room next to
the large map of the reservation. People started throwing out suggestions about
different markets, farmers, processing plants, and refrigeration sites food sources,
sometimes disagreeing about the importance of one thing or another. One elder in
particular started to reminisce about the old days when they had a root cellar and could
keep cans down there for years, or about the old ricing days in the fall, and sugar bush
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camp in the spring. This time dimension was present throughout the meeting. Several
times, someone would begin to reminisce about the old days, bringing in the
significance of incorporating the past into the present day foodshed.
Figure 1: White Earth Foodshed Mapping
The meeting went on for several hours, until the junk food was long gone and the coffee
was cold, yet no one lost attention, no one got restless or sidetracked – the room was
fully involved and eager to keep working. I was moved by the dedication and
determination of the group. There was such an energy of fortitude and it became clear
to me the significance of what was occurring in the room around me; I was witnessing
the shaping of the future through food. This small community had brought together a
diverse group of scholars, activists, teachers, government officials, and concerned
citizens to talk about food. And yet, I was struck by the irony of us attempting to regain
control over the health and well-being of the community, while eating chips and donuts,
the very foods that created many of the health and economic injustices facing American
Indian communities across the United States. How could we be eating such heavily
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processed foods that were so at odds with the mission of this group? The answer lies in
the complex reality life on the reservations and the challenges of creating a new future
from a present still coping with the issues of the past.
This meeting was not about regaining control over where this community’s food comes
from for the sake of going back to some idealized past. This meeting was about
recognizing where this community has been, acknowledging their roots, and their
struggles and their realities and progressing into a new paradigm keeping those realities
in mind.
I began to realize the importance of food as a means of communicating these ideas, and
to recognize the significance of the past when approaching the structural aspects of the
present and future. The Native groups I worked with drew my attention to this simple
fact – one must understand and respect the past to guide future choices. In a community
where so much has been shaped at the hands of someone else, this is the first step in
regaining social agency, independence and power. The Ojibwe have a very unique way
of addressing economic, political, and structural issues that encompasses their deep
spiritual and relational outlook on the world. It is a holistic perspective that uses its
respect for tradition, and acknowledgement of the past to forge a new future.
This was a complex meeting and I came away from it with mixed feelings. I was
impressed and inspired by the wise words and energy of the group, but at the same time,
I was discouraged by the contradictions it presented in the form of junk food. The
desires and efforts being undertaken to change current norms within Indigenous
communities and groups in the State of Minnesota encouraged me to ask the questions,
Why is food such an effective communicator and how is it being used to communicate
the larger goals of the Ojibwe people? These emotions followed me throughout my time
in the field. This thesis is about my experiences in the field within the food sovereignty
movement, and how food is being used as a means of regaining social agency through
traditional values in Ojibwe culture.
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1.2 Livelihoods on the Reservation: Motivation
and Rationale
Before beginning this research, I was aware of the struggles and hardships occurring on
Indian reservations across the United States. This has always troubled me, and I wished
I had a better grasp of the history and issues facing the reservations in my home state of
Minnesota. I was also aware of the past relationship between American Indians and the
US government. Within the state of Minnesota, there are seven sovereign Ojibwe
reservations, which were all established by treaties signed with the US government.
These sovereign reservations are paradoxically not sovereign in that they are in many
instances dependent on larger states, namely the United States. That said, the
reservations maintain legal independence and self-governance (Barreiro and Johnson
2005:4). Despite their own means of governance, the US government has throughout
history attempted to impose its laws on these sovereign bodies, making reservations
sovereign without the means to exercise it. The efforts to eliminate and assimilate
Native Americans created serious societal issues within the Tribes that are still very
much present today. The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) is primarily responsible for
providing 562 federally recognized tribes with federal services. Much literature
supports the claim that this reliance on the US government for resources left Indigenous
communities without traditionally appropriate means of feeding and clothing their
communities. A large percentage of Native communities were forced to accept help
from the US federal government. Unfortunately, the resources necessary to meet the
needs of the reservations were, and continue to be vastly under met. Among these
under-met needs include health, education, land access, and housing, which I will
examine in more detail.
1.2.1 Health and Nutrition
In general, Native Americans have a lower life-expectancy and the highest rates of
diseases including Diabetes, Alcoholism, and Tuberculosis, as compared to the general
populations, yet health facilities and medical attention are often obsolete on the
reservations. 16.1 percent of Native Americans have diabetes, making it the highest age
adjusted prevalence of diabetes among any racial group in the United States. The
overall health status of the American Indians is poorer than that of the general
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population by most indicators. (Regaining Food Sovereignty 2013). This holds true
within the state of Minnesota, where reservations have some of the highest rates of
poverty, alcoholism, diabetes, and heart disease per capita. Today one third of the
service population at Indian Health Service has diabetes.
David Manuel is a member of the Red Lake Band of Ojibwe. We met briefly during a
bee-keeping seminar at the Indigenous Environmental Network in Bemidji. He was
featured in the documentary, Regaining Food Sovereignty, where he stated;
I’ve had four heart attacks in my life. I grew up on bacon and hamburger
and McDonald’s and all the not so good stuff… (Regaining Food
Sovereignty 2012).
According to the United States Department of Agriculture, American Indians are twice
as likely to face hunger and food insecurity as the general population. Due to economic
instability, many reservations rely on federal funding from the Food Distribution
Program on Indian Reservations (FDPIR). Again, funding for this program has been cut,
and is insufficient to meet the needs of the population. According to the White Earth
Land Recovery Project, the situation on the reservation was dire. “People were starving.
Not for something edible, but for actual food. The normal diet, which was similar to that
in most impoverished communities, lack un-dyed, real, unprocessed options” (Jackson
2012). The White Earth Land Recovery Project feels that the restoration of traditional
foods could dramatically transform the current obesity and diabetes epidemic and
provide a foundation for food security in Native communities (WELRP 2012).
As an ancient staple of the Ojibwe diet, wild rice played an essential part of balanced
nutrition in Ojibwe communities. The sudden shift from a hunter and gatherer society to
a more sedentary lifestyle accompanied by the increased consumption of processed
foods has created an epidemic of diabetes and obesity across the State. Frank Haney
touched upon this during our lunch conversation:
When native people were put on reservations, they were no longer able to
eat their traditional food sources so they were fed government commodity
food, which basically consisted of fat and sugar and flour. That went on for
generations. But as time went on and generations came and went, a lot of
native people tended to prefer that kind of food. Even to this day you can
get allotments of commodity foods every month (Haney: interviewed
07.14).
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1.2.2 Education
In addition to the health issues, it is well documented that Native American children are
not offered the same educational opportunities as their non-native counterparts. A
project undertaken by the University of California Los Angeles found that graduation
rates for American Indians and Alaska Natives (46.6%) were lower than the graduation
rates for all other racial/ethnic groups including whites (69.8%), Asians (77.9%), Blacks
(54.7%) and Hispanics (50.8%) (Faircloth and Tippeconnic 2010). Many reservation
schools are run by the Bureau of Indian Education or by tribes themselves and lack
adequate teaching facilities, funds to pay teachers and develop sufficient curriculum,
and a safe and just atmosphere for children to learn in (Faircloth and Tippeconnic
2010:6). There are 32 accredited tribal colleges nation-wide, with five non-affiliated
offering associates, bachelors, and some master’s degree programs (Butrymowicz
2014). Unfortunately, success rates are low. The average percentage of students who
earn four-year degrees within six years (or two-year degrees within three years) at these
schools is only 20 percent, according to a Hechinger Report analysis of federal
graduation data—one third the national average and half the rate of Native students at
non-tribal schools (Butrymowicz 2014). Higher educational institutes face similar
problems owing to the fact that tribal colleges receive 60 percent less funding than their
state operated counterparts (U.S. Commission on Civil Rights 2003). I encountered
problems finding recent data on American Indian education and graduation rates.
Faircloth and Tippeconnic describe encountering similar problems, explaining this lack
of findings in part due to a highly mobile population, mistrust of the motives of the data
gatherers, and a geographically dispersed population, making surveying difficult
(Faircloth and Tippeconnic 2010). This aside, the numbers I found all point to an
education gap between Native Americans and other ethnicities.
1.2.3 Land Access and Housing
According to the United States Congress, almost 47 million of the more than 54 million
acres of tribal and individual Indian trust lands are rangeland and cropland, an
enormous potential food resource. Seventy percent of cropland and twenty percent of
rangeland is leased to non-Indians, reducing Native control of land and food production
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at its source. More than 8,000 Native farms operate on reservations, but they produce
few crops for household consumption (Dwyer 2010).
Housing is provided on many reservations through the Department of Housing and
Urban Development. Due to lack of funding to the agency, over 60 percent of the
government housing available is considered inadequate and one in five reservation
homes lack plumbing (U.S. Commission on Civil Rights 2003).
In the State of Minnesota, the 25,000 people living on the Red Lake, Leech Lake and
White Earth Indian reservations go largely overlooked. Despite their size, little is
understood by most Minnesotans about the sovereign bodies located within the State.
Yet attention is being drawn to the unique efforts the reservations are making within the
realm of food justice. In Ojibwe communities, many active players are paving the way
through actively exercising their agency through mainly grassroots projects such as
elementary farm to school educational programs that aim to reintroduce young people to
their native language and traditions, land reform movements to regain access to
traditionally held land, legal action for rights to hunting, fishing, and gathering
privileges. All of these are dedicated to preserving and sustaining Ojibwe ways of life.
These aspects have been my motivation for undertaking this research. This thesis is my
attempt to understand and learn from these efforts, while finally acknowledging the
serious injustices my home country has done on the very people who called it home
first.
1.3 Research Questions
I have spent much time assessing the themes and key aspects of this research. The
questions and emotions raised during the foodshed mapping set the stage for this
research. I began to question the reasons for the contradictions within the meeting, the
importance of empowerment and the barriers to change. From there, I analyzed the
theoretical foundations of anthropological work relating to agency, time and practice.
This allowed me to see past approaches and methods to answering research questions.
From very broad beginnings relating to what food sovereignty means, to how the
movement has impacted the Ojibwe communities of Minnesota, I have narrowed down
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my research questions to those I feel are both the most relevant, useful and the most
interesting. They are as follows:
1.) Why is food such an effective communicator?
2.) How is food being used to communicate the larger goals of the Ojibwe people?
1.4 Concepts and Definitions
In order to understand this research and fully appreciate the significance of what
communities are doing, it is important to have an understanding of the broader research
and context of the growing “food movement”. Modern agriculture has had an
astounding impact on the world’s ability to provide for its citizens, yet the serious
environmental and health impacts it has made are becoming more and more difficult to
ignore. According to Jonathan Foley of the University of Minnesota,
Agriculture is also the largest single source of greenhouse gas emissions from
society, collectively accounting for about 35 percent of the carbon dioxide,
methane and nitrous oxide we release. That is more than the emissions from
worldwide transportation (including all cars, trucks and planes) or electricity
generation (Foley 2005)
In addition, water resources are becoming scarcer, the use of fertilizers and pesticides is
more widespread than ever, and the runoff of the fertilizers nitrogen and phosphorus,
are creating hypoxic, or oxygen depleted oceanic “dead zones” at the deltas of major
waterways, which are void of life. These issues are becoming more and more
problematic and conspicuous. With an increasing population and more mouths to feed,
it is becoming clear that changes must be made to the way food is produced.
In response to these concerns and spurred on by environmental and social justice
movements, food has become the new “buzz topic.” From local farmers markets and
slogans such as know your farmer, buy local, and support small scale farms to celebrity
chefs introducing the public to organic and local produce (see Syse 2015:165) and
Vandana Shiva’s Navdanya campaign against genetically modified organisms (GMOs),
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the concepts of “sustainable food systems” and “sustainable agriculture” have become
widely recognized in many parts of the globe. In Minnesota, many projects and
organizations are working to advance this arena. The Land Stewardship Project,
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, Sustainable Agriculture Research and
Education Program, and The Minnesota Project are just a few of the commonly heard
names of firms working in these areas. Minnesota now has 43 cooperatives that support
local, sustainable and organic food, reflecting the desire for small scale local options
(Coop Directory). According to a case-study of Minnesota cooperatives undertaken by
the Cooperative Development Services,
The Minnesota coop local food value chain comprises well over 300
producers, a cooperatively owned distributor of organic product, and 15
consumer cooperatives operating 17 retail food stores, backed by 91,000
co-op member-owners and an additional 50,000 shoppers. In the year
leading up to this study, total retail sales through this cooperative system
were $179,000,000 ($179M), with local product accounting for 30 percent
of sales, or around $54M. Local farm gate income (income flowing to
producers) after distributor and retail margins is estimated to be over half
of those local sales or $30M (Tockinger and Gutknecht 2014).
The idea of a sustainable food system provides a means of recognizing the complex
external natural forces as well as the intricate market forces related to food production
and distribution. According to the Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education
Program, which works across the United States to promote research, education, and
innovation in sustainable agriculture,
A food system includes all processes and infrastructure involved in feeding
a population: growing, harvesting, processing, packaging, transporting,
marketing, consumption, and disposal of food and food-related items. A
food system operates within and is influenced by social, political,
economic and environmental contexts (SARE 2012).
SARE describes its core values as preserving resources and high levels of well-being
across agricultural communities (SARE 2012). Their definition is useful for thinking
about producing food. It allows people to think of food production as a complex
ecosystem, in which all parts are connected and reliant upon the others. The food
system is the overarching “ecosystem” in which all food related practices take place.
Within this realm of the food system, are smaller keystone concepts and ideas which
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govern specific pieces of the food system. The most influential keystone concept for
this work, is that of food sovereignty, which first arose from the experience and analysis
by farming peoples. La Vía Campesina, in 1996, first discussed food sovereignty at its
Second International Conference, held on April 18–21, 1996, in Tlaxcala, Mexico
(Wittman et al).
The definition they provided became the backbone of the movement and will do the
same for this research.
Food sovereignty is the right of peoples to healthy and culturally
appropriate food produced through ecologically sound and sustainable
methods, and their right to define their own food and agriculture systems.
It puts those who produce, distribute and consume food at the heart of food
systems and policies rather than the demands of markets and corporations.
It defends the interests and inclusion of the next generation. It offers a
strategy to resist and dismantle the current corporate trade and food
regime, and directions for food, farming, pastoral and fisheries systems
determined by local producers. Food sovereignty prioritizes local and
national economies and markets and empowers peasant and family farmer-
driven agriculture, artisanal fishing, pastoralist-led grazing, and food
production, distribution and consumption based on environmental, social
and economic sustainability. Food sovereignty promotes transparent trade
that guarantees just income to all peoples and the rights of consumers to
control their food and nutrition. It ensures that the rights to use and manage
our lands, territories, waters, seeds, livestock and biodiversity are in the
hands of those of us who produce food. Food sovereignty implies new
social relations free of oppression and inequality between men and women,
peoples, racial groups, social classes and generations. (Via Campesina
2007)
I would like to point out that this definition takes care to acknowledge that people have
the right to culturally appropriate food…which is an essential aspect of successful
implementation of the projects of food. I will discuss this idea in more detail with
respect to agency and the Ojibwe people in chapters to come.
It should be said that despite their close connection, there is a significant difference
between the terms food security and food sovereignty. The Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations (FAO) defines food security as,“ Food security
exists when all people, at all times, have physical, social and economic access to
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sufficient, safe and nutritious food which meets their dietary needs and food preferences
for an active and healthy life” (FAO 2015).
While this concept is an essential aspect of a well-functioning and healthy society, it
has been argued that the term food security skirts the issues of social control of the food
system, meaning for example, that it is possible to have food security under
dictatorships or in prison. Democratization and political justice must therefore be
included in the process. It can therefore be said that food sovereignty is a precondition
for the existence of food security (Patel 2009: 2). In other words, what is significant
and useful about food sovereignty is that it takes into consideration democratization and
justice.
Food sovereignty as a concept has been widely accepted and used in the work of Non-
Governmental Organizations, non-profits, and social movements, but has yet to take
hold in the political sphere. Work has been undertaken by scholars to address the
rhetoric of food sovereignty and its use in different circles. The vast majority of the
literature pertains to defining and redefining food sovereignty, and understanding its
historical context. Michel Pimbert illustrates this in “Toward Food Sovereignty:
Reclaiming Autonomous Food Systems”, stating that
Many actors working for food sovereignty in a variety of rural and urban
contexts recognize that more debate is needed to clarify the concept of
food sovereignty at a time when many organizations make references to it
without understanding its deeply political character, which is radically
different from the dominant neo-liberal economic system. Moreover,
several actors use the term food sovereignty in a restrictive manner,
emphasizing self-sufficiency and isolationist proposals that reject
exchanges and complementarities between regions (Pimbert 2006).
The work being done often describes the movements of Latin America. Many, such as
Altieri (2009) and Patel (2009), focus on the positive contributions of groups such as La
Via Campesina to food sovereignty. That said, food systems and the food sovereignty
movement are relatively new concepts to academia. This thesis will acknowledge the
work that has been undertaken by scholars, before moving their efforts forward into
thinking of food sovereignty in relation to social agency in the context of the American
system. While many studies focus on the impacts and significance of defining new
terms and potential positive outcomes of new food systems and food sovereignty, I
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struggled to find contextual evidence and lived examples of food as a process in specific
Native communities. I did not find evidence of the use of traditional methods of
ethnography in analyzing the Indigenous food sovereignty movement with respect to
agentic projects. While on fieldwork, however, I met Elizabeth Hoover, an associate
professor of American Studies and Ethnic Studies at Brown University, who was
documenting the Indigenous Food sovereignty movement across the United States. She
and her partner, Angelo Baca, a filmmaker and professor of Native American Literature
and Native American Film, spent three months traveling the country observing and
documenting farm, garden and food sovereignty projects to analyze their challenges and
definitions of food sovereignty. While the breadth and scope of their research was
vaster than my own, their work is a visual display of many projects and does not address
food as a process in a specific community or group.
Following the 1998 World Health Organization designation of obesity as a global
epidemic, much research has been conducted analyzing obesity and the nutritional
transition. Some of this research addresses the difference in socioeconomic background
and obesity rates, which reflect the trends seen in the Native American community. One
such study published in the International Journal of Pediatric Obesity found that,
There is a strong body of evidence of an inverse socioeconomic gradient
with childhood obesity in developed nations internationally. Our findings
suggest that cultural factors (including language, religion, and health
beliefs, values and behaviours) are likely to explain some of the marked
ethnic differences seen in obesity prevalence in children and adults. We
know the health and wellbeing of culturally and linguistically diverse
communities is influenced by the interplay of social, economic,
environmental, individual risk and protective factors (Waters et al. 2011)
A study in The Obesity Reviews, by Lobstein et al. found that children in lower income
families within Industrialized nations were more likely to develop obesity and type two
diabetes due to poor diet and lack of exercise. It was also found that child obesity is
rising in wealthier sections of developing countries possibly due to the exposure to
Westernized diets (Lobstein et al 2004: 5). With respect to the exposure to westernized
diets, many have focused on the impacts of globalization on traditional diets. The
nutrition transition has been defined as that shift in nutritional concerns, from excess
malnutrition and even starvation, to overweight and obesity as predominant nutrition
15
patterns among members of a population, based on large shifts in diet structure related
to changing economic and social factors (Popkin and Gordon-Larson qtd. in Compher
2006). As noted earlier, this has resulted in less culturally appropriate diversified food
sources and more processed foods, coupled with lack of physical activity. A study of
Arctic Indigenous groups found that despite traditionally high diversity in diet, fewer
and fewer of these food sources are being used (Kuhnlein et al 2004). Others have
conducted research that falls into the realm of food justice, addressing this as an issue of
access to healthy food options in lower income communities. One study of food deserts
in Minnesota stated that minority individuals living below the poverty line consume less
fruits and vegetables than is currently recommended. This presents a problem due to the
well-established evidence that fresh fruits and vegetables contribute vitamins, minerals,
antioxidants, fiber, and phytochemicals to the diet (Hendrickson 2004). The article
found that the existence of food deserts and absence of these foods may be contributing
to the higher prevalence of morbidity and mortality rates seen in this population
(Hendrickson 2004). First Lady Michelle Obama has brought the issues of nutrition and
obesity to the forefront of American policy by making it her mission to combat obesity
and poor nutrition, specifically targeting low-income and minority communities with
the program, Let’s Move! (Let’s Move! 2015). The research fields of health and
nutrition have received much attention and has built the foundation for the food
sovereignty and indigenous food sovereignty movements. Public health and nutrition
are important political tools to communicating the issues of today’s modern agricultural
system.
The environmental, social, and health impacts of the current industrialized agricultural
system have spurred a vast array of solutions and responses. Much of this attention is
now focused on the concepts of food systems, food security and food sovereignty.
Addressing these theories gives background and structure to this research, providing
context to the communities I will be observing. I find that understanding the serious
implications of current agricultural practices helps make clear the significance of the
work being undertaken in Ojibwe communities.
Some linguistic aspects of this paper must also be acknowledged and defined. The
word Ojibwe has several different spellings and interpretations. Ojibway, Ojibwa,
Chippewa, and Ojibwey have all been used and there is some disagreement about where
16
the term comes from and how it should be spelled. Henry Schoolcraft, an author and
scholar of the Ojibwe people said this about the name,
The word ojib or Ojibwa, means literally ‘puckered, or drawn up.’ The
answer of their old men when questioned respecting the derivation of their
tribal name, is that the name is derived from a peculiarity in the make or
fashion of their moccasin, which has a puckered seam length ways over the
foot, and which is termed,the O-jib-wa moccasin (Schoolcraft qtd. Warren
1885).
Despite his spelling, others have noted that the name was pronounced O-jib-way, or –
wey, which should be spelled with a –y. It is today common to see it spelled Ojibwe
within much of the literature on the tribe. I will use the most common current spelling,
Ojibwe throughout this work. In addition, the terms Indigenous and Native American
and American Indian are all commonly used to describe the Ojibwe people. I will use
them interchangeably.
The term reservation is, by many, either unknown or ill-understood. According to the
US Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), a federal Indian reservation is an area of land
reserved for a tribe or tribes under treaty or other agreement with the United States,
executive order, or federal statute or administrative action as permanent tribal
homelands, and where the federal government holds title to the land in trust on behalf of
the tribe. Approximately 56.2 million acres are held in trust by the United States for
various Indian tribes and individuals. There are approximately 326 Indian land areas in
the U.S. administered as federal Indian reservations (Bureau of Indian Affairs 2015).
I would like to note that while I use the term “western” to compare the stark differences
between historical Indigenous and European/colonial mindsets, I would like to make
note that this is not a black and white juxtaposition, particularly in the modern age.
Lastly, I would like to acknowledge that the concept of regaining agency through
indigenous food systems is not a project undertaken by all community members. This
effort is part of a civil movement, not simply a community project. This work does not
wish to alienate members of the community who disagree with, or wish to be left out of
the projects of food sovereignty. While these efforts are part of a larger civil
movement, my concern is at the community level.
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1.5 Shaping the Conceptual Framework
Many anthropologists and researchers have talked about cyclical time in native culture.
Black Elk, an Oglala Sioux holy man, describes the indigenous perception of time in
this eloquent quote:
Everything the power of the world does is done in a circle. The sky is
round… the earth is round like a ball and so are all the stars. The wind, in
its greatest power, whirls. Birds make their nests in circles, for theirs is the
same religion as ours. The sun comes forth and goes down again in a
circle. The moon does the same…even the seasons changing, and always
come back again to where they were. The life of a man is a circle from
childhood to childhood and so it is in everything where power moves
(Neihart and Black Elk 2008).
Themes of cycles are abundant in Indigenous societies. As we will see later, this
concept of the circle was mentioned during my time in the field. While this is valuable
to shape more spiritual aspects of native culture, I will use a different frame to describe
time in Ojibwe culture. While the terms I use to describe the efforts of the Ojibwe
people are those that suggest returning to their cultural roots, I do not wish to think of
this in terms of going back to the beginning. Regaining and revitalizing their cultural
heritage is a vital aspect of this work, but I would like to make clear that these efforts
are progressing Ojibwe communities into a new future built on the themes of the past.
The Indigenous food sovereignty movement is incorporating traditional food practices
into a vastly different present reality and vision for the future.
In this research, ignoring the significance of the past, present and future, would be a
great injustice. Clearly, time is significant within this work and it is necessary to
describe notions of time within anthropology. Despite time’s presence in all aspects of
anthropological study, it is often neglected as a theoretical frame. As Munn states, time
has often been the handmaiden to other anthropological frames and issues… it is
frequently fragmented into all other dimensions and topics anthropologists deal with in
the social world (Munn 1992:93). “Time puts on mundane, empiricist clothing, instead
of the ‘qualitative,’ myth-ritual dress of Durkheimian representations” (Munn 1992:96).
She analyzes situations through a temporal lens, not merely as a backdrop in which
research is conducted. While I acknowledge that there has likely been new research
18
undertaken in this realm, I appreciate Munn’s terminology and unique understanding of
time in Indigenous societies and find it helpful in describing my work.
To give a more concrete example of how this will be useful within my research, I will
use Munn and her work with the Gawan people of the South Pacific. In her paper,
“Constructing Regional Worlds in Experience: Kula Exchange, Witchcraft and Gawan
Local Events,” Munn refers to a unifying framework of “indigenous historical
consciousness or historical memory: the experiential formulation of the past within any
given present” (Munn 1990: 2). Munn uses the example of Kula shell exchange
between island communities to describe the impacts of past events on the present, which
will undeniably have future repercussions. I am interested in the way the Ojibwe use
this same idea to articulate the meaningful relationship between people and food. As
Munn states, the Gawan [people] do not simply reach back into the past to draw
relations into the present, but they attempt to stop the expected destructive outcomes of
certain past events and prefigure positive futures (Munn 1990: 12). This, is useful to
describe Ojibwe relationships to food; the Ojibwe do not simply use food in a
continuum to draw the past into the present, but to disrupt the potential negative impacts
of the past on the future. The impacts of food are not static, but provide a horizon of
possibilities for future events.
Current efforts within Ojibwe communities to use food as a means of regaining social
agency are mindful of their unique relationship to the past. In the case of the indigenous
food sovereignty movement, communities are using food to reshape the potential
negative impacts of their unjust past. Without this acknowledgement of past tradition
and culture, the creation of new spaces for participation and projects would be
unsuccessful. This work will make a conscious effort to address time not as a backdrop,
but as an active shaper in the process of regaining social agency in Ojibwe
communities. Thus, I ask the questions, How does food form direction? What are the
past relations held within food?
As humans act within a present created by past events, it is important to acknowledge
the connection between temporality and agency. This definition from Carl Ratner is
useful in its explicit connection between agency and time. “Agency is the active
element of culture. Being a cultural phenomenon means that agency is a historical
project which must be realized through humanizing society” (Ratner 2000: 413).
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Society is both the ever-present condition and the continually reproduced outcome of
human agency. Mustafa Emirbayer and Ann Mische have also described agency as
temporal.
Theoretically, our central contribution is to begin to reconceptualize human
agency as a temporally embedded process of social engagement, informed
by the past (in its habitual aspect), but also oriented toward the future (as a
capacity to imagine alternative possibilities) and toward the present (as a
capacity to contextualize past habits and future projects within the
contingencies of the moment) (Emirbayer, Mische 1998).
The term agency has many interpretations and potential frames. While I use Ratner,
Emirbayer and Mische to illustrate the connection between Munn’s work and social
agency, I will be using Sherry Ortner’s book, “Anthropology and Social Theory:
Culture, Power and the Acting Subject” (2006) and her concept of agentic projects to
frame the majority of this research.
There has been a great deal of criticism of the term agency, calling it ethnocentric in
nature, individualistic instead of contextual and overly simplistic. Ortner argues that the
goals of agency should be to theorize the desires and motivations of real people, as well
as the practices in the social process. Agency is never a thing in itself, but part of a
process; the making and reforming of larger social and cultural formations. Ortner
envisions social agents as never acting outside the multitude of social relationships in
which actors live. Thus agents, despite the individualistic connotations associated with
the term, are never free to act outside social, cultural, and historical structures (Ortner
2006:134).
One key concept that must be acknowledged within her work is that of intentionality,
which “includes a wide array of states, both cognitive and emotional, and at various
levels of consciousness, that are directed forward toward some end” (Ortner 2006:134).
Intentionality can range from highly conscious plots and schemes, less concrete aims
and goals, and finally desires, or routine behaviors, which can be deeply buried and
subconscious. Ortner call these two ends of a spectrum; soft agency on one end, with
no intentionality, and hard agency on the other, with highly conscious intention. This
research will fall within the harder aspect of agency, due to the fact that Ojibwe
communities have conscious goals, missions and intentions. These goals and intentions
20
include creating a Native community that is more self-sufficient, empowered, and
resilient, while revitalizing traditional values and customs.
I particularly appreciate Ortner’s recognition of agency as a dual relationship between
power and projects, resistance and domination, which I will address in greater detail.
Ortner states:
Broadly speaking, the notion of agency can be said to have two fields of
meaning. In one field of meaning, agency is about intentionality and the
pursuit of culturally defined projects. In the other field of meaning, agency
is about power. About acting within relations of social inequality,
asymmetry and force. Agency has two faces – as the pursuit of projects or
as the exercise of or against power, which blend or bleed into one another,
or else retain their distinctiveness but intertwine in a moebius-type
relationship (Ortner 2006:139).
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Figure 2: Shades of Agency
I will use two terms to describe this spectrum. First, shades of agency, which describes
the type of agentic project from light to dark. Second, I will use the terms soft and hard
agency as these are the words of Sherry Ortner. Soft agency is interchangeable with the
light side of the sphere, and hard agency is interchangeable with the dark side of the
sphere. These are all reflected in the diagram above. The projects of the Ojibwe
encompass multiple aspects of soft and hard agency, resistance and power, spiritual and
structural. Projects of agency are the actions taken by players – they are in a sense the
tangible, grounded representation of agency. Ojibwe communities are highly agentic, in
that they have projects of intention that aim to achieve a culturally appropriate goal. In
their case, projects such as the food sovereignty movement act within a system of
22
inequality, and against it, resisting its impacts. Ojibwe communities are acting on the
margins of power – both yearning to reestablish their own structures, while pushing
against the realities of their everyday life. This research will explore these food-based
projects as the visible manifestation of the process of agency within marginalized
communities. These “projects of food,” include grassroots efforts and community
participation, which I will expand upon throughout this work, using them as illustrations
of the larger theme of agency.
These agentic projects of food, which act on a spectrum from soft cultural and spiritual
projects to those of hard agency, using resistance and power, touch upon the themes of
civil movements. These projects take place within larger more theoretical ideas. These
include the state, the physical geographical places of the Ojibwe both positive and
negative that motivate action, the spaces created from this motivation, and the new
paradigms of participation and self-reliance the spaces encourage. These are
interconnected, each influencing the creation of the next. I find that Andrea Cornwall
and John Gaventa provide useful means of describing this relationship. Participation
can be thought of as the process of creating spaces where there previously were none,
enlarging spaces where previously there were very limited opportunities for public
involvement, and about allowing people to occupy spaces that were previously denied
to them (Cornwall 2004: 77). Used often in the context of development studies,
participation often refers to creating a more dynamic and democratic relationship
between citizens and governing institutions. Cornwall describes the dynamics of power
through the concept of participation as a spatial practice (Cornwall 2004:78). Created
‘spaces’ for participation and engagement come in many forms. Lefebvre states that
space is a social product…it is not simply ‘there’, a neutral container waiting to be
filled, but is a dynamic, humanly constructed means of control and hence of
domination, of power (Lefebvre 1991: 24). As Cornwall asserts,
the spaces in which citizens are invited to participate, as well as those they
create, are never neutral. Creating spaces for participation and
transformation calls for strengthening the possibilities of active citizen
engagement in both institutions of power, and spaces which citizens make
and shape themselves (Cornwall 2004 :85).
In terms of this fieldwork, the spaces created for active participation and engagement
often occur at the grassroots level , much like the foodshed mapping which created a
23
new meeting space for community members, non-profits and scholars to voice opinions
and ideas. The spaces also occur around the dinner table, when family and friends can
come together and discuss issues over good food. Their goals and missions however,
often incorporate the structural political level, and attempt to address much larger
issues. Scale aside; the creation of these spaces is essential to this research and the
larger theme of food sovereignty.
This work incorporates the frames and concepts discussed to address the notions of
progress and innovation, acknowledging the fact that the projects undertaken by
communities are by no means an effort to simply return to the past ways of doing
things. While terms like, “regaining, returning, and revitalizing” are essential to
communicating the significance of the cultural past, it is clear that the communities in
question are moving into new paradigms of political process, participatory forms of
government, more holistic views of food production and education, and economic self-
sufficiency. They take into account new players and the globalizing world in the
present, while instilling their goals and desires for the future. Using these low-level
theoretical frames and community based examples, my attempt is to answer the
questions, what is it about food that makes it such an effective communicator? How is it
being used to communicate the goals of the Ojibwe people?
With this in mind, it was clear to me that culture is a resource within these communities
and that experiencing these projects face to face was the only way to study them.
1.6 In the Field: Methodologies and Groundwork
This need to understand projects and understand culture as a resource lent itself to the
method of ethnography. It was clear to me that the projects and ideas being
communicated in the field must be understood through the eyes of an active participant.
I took this to heart, working hard throughout my time in the field to find opportunities to
participate in projects. Ethnography allows researchers to observe their area of study
through engagement and participation. This anthropological form of research focuses
on the workings of the every day. My fieldwork did exactly this; I ate dinner with
families, spent many meals with community members talking over dinners and lunches,
and spent a lot of time literally in the field pulling weeds, picking crops, and planting.
24
Ethnographic research is grounded in constructivist methodology, and emphasizes the
idea that truth cannot be found without immersing oneself in the area of study. Stewart
states in, “The Ethnographer’s Method,” that ethnography can be defined by several
major characteristics. Ethnography is based on observation, is holistic in nature, and
typically occurs in the form of a long-term study. Ethnography involves sociocultural
description, or studying and observing social dynamics and cultural norms.
Ethnography has characteristics in common with grounded theory, in that both view
observations through contextual evidence before construing data in terms of an existing
theory (Stewart 1998:5). I attempted to keep this in mind, observing before determining
the set frame of my research. Researchers often employ a number of data collecting
techniques when doing an ethnographic study including taking field notes, conducting
interviews and surveys with community members, mapping the geography,
relationships and power structures (see figure 2), and lastly analysis of texts and
documents related to the work.
My ethnographic study took place over three months in the summer of 2014. I am
referring to my fieldwork as focused ethnography, which relies more heavily on the
analysis of texts, documents, and interviews with informants than on long term
observation, while requiring fewer resources and less time in the field (Stewart
1998:16). Before I entered the field, I heavily researched the groups and individuals
involved in the food sovereignty movement and contacted them. There were many
existing texts, including films and other literature put out by the major organizations. I
relied on these films and resources heavily during the initial phase of my research.
When I arrived in the field, I began my work close to my home and expanded outward
from there. This allowed me to “get my feet wet” and adjust my questions and scope
based on the initial day trips and volunteer sessions. My study consisted of taking
detailed field notes on cultural differences, observations, and informant comments,
journaling about my thoughts and feelings in the field, participation within non-profits,
cultural meetings, mapping of relationships and geographical location, textual analysis
before entering the field, and in-depth informal interviews. Many interviews were over
an hour long, occurring in places familiar to the interviewee. I traveled between several
communities of varying geographical local, interviewing key informants and
volunteering at non-profits. I played both an active role in the communities and the role
of observer. I attended dinner with a family in Northern Minnesota and was introduced
25
to common topics of conversation and a relaxed atmosphere in which I could
comfortably ask questions. This was an influential meeting and provided me with
relevant themes for my work.
26
Figure 3: Initial Mapping of Field and Players (Donlin fieldnotes)
27
Focused ethnography does, however, present some potential barriers to research. A
shorter period in the field could lead to mischaracterization and misunderstanding of
observations (Stewart 1998:20). These shortcomings of modified ethnography were
acknowledged during my time in the field. Some, such as the short time period spent in
the field, were unavoidable due to my limited budget and timeline. In order to
compensate for this shortened time, I narrowed the focus of this study to include
informants and groups that were directly involved in the realm of food and food
sovereignty. Although it can be argued that this narrow focus may affect my findings, I
argue that it had no relevant impact on the scope of my research. Stewart states that “it
should be conceded that the more targeted or limited the ethnography is to a particular
and well-defined topic, the less time is needed for fieldwork (Stewart 20). I was
working directly with the efforts being taken by communities to regain agency through
the projects of food, which I believe justified my specific focus on non-profits and
active community members. I argue that this short time spent in the field is acceptable
considering that I was not presented with language barriers or significant cultural
restrictions as I was in my home country and state. That being said, the overall context
in a broader scale was that in which I grew up. It has been argued that it is most difficult
to understand and observe cultural norms and habits in one’s own society. While I did
initially worry about this “cultural blindness,” it became clear that the subject matter
and area I was studying was specific enough to differentiate. I was presented with new
norms and cultural differences as I am a non-Native Minnesotan and grew up in the
suburbs of Minnesota’s largest cities.
I did face several challenges beyond time scale and resources, including security issues.
I was often told not to travel alone or to journey to certain places at night. Due to this, I
often returned to larger towns at night. Occasionally I did feel unsafe and out of place –
some small reservation towns’ road signs sported numerous bullet holes and I observed
several middle aged men walking along the road clearly inebriated. The high rate of
substance abuse was visible at times and I stayed clear of situations in which I felt
uncomfortable or uneasy. I was also concerned that I would be perceived as insensitive
and naïve as a non-Native researcher studying Ojibwe culture. I was not sure how to
present myself, and was uncomfortable knowing the treatment the Ojibwe have received
28
by non-natives over the past few centuries. To the contrary, I was very well received
within the field and despite occasional initial apprehension toward me as a researcher
this was always short lived. I was grateful and touched by the inviting nature of
everyone I met – I was welcomed into people’s homes, and twice given directions when
lost by complete strangers, who hopped in their cars to show me the way. It appeared
that the topic of food and the nature of my research (understanding the growing food
sovereignty movement) were keen subjects of discussion. That said, I did face some
challenges contacting people and collecting data more recent than 2013. Several
actually told me to remember that I was on “Indian time” which was meant to mean that
time moves at a slower pace in Indian communities.
While this thesis assesses and focuses on the food sovereignty movement in Minnesota,
it is not an all-encompassing. Although I hope that this thesis gives insight into a
growing movement, the findings should not be used to make broad assumptions about
indigenous peoples, food sovereignty, or social agency. This is a qualitative research
project, which drew findings from six interviews with key players, participation and
volunteer work, and in depth field notes. I would also like to acknowledge that while I
aimed to focus directly on Ojibwe peoples and communities, I also received information
from members of the Dakota, Arapaho, and Oneida tribes, who are working within the
movement, namely at Dream of Wild Health, which has no tribal affiliation.
Ethical considerations must be taken when conducting master’s level research. During
my time in the field, I always presented myself in a professional manner and introduced
myself as a researcher from the University of Oslo. I gave a description of my project
and when conducting interviews, asked whether I could take notes or record. My
interviews were conducted with informants who acknowledged that they were being
interviewed for my thesis. It was also important to introduce myself and acknowledge
cultural norms. I felt that an informal attitude and interview structure was best suited to
my study area.
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1.7 Roadmap
The motivation for this work was the loss of lifeways in Ojibwe culture. I have always
been disturbed by the injustices of the past and was keen to learn more about why
Ojibwe communities are using food to come out of this vicious cycle of losses.
Throughout this qualitative study, I use notions of past, present and future, space, and
agency to describe the projects of food. This thesis is separated into six chapters, which
focus on the different time horizons of the food sovereignty movement in Ojibwe
communities. In chapter two, I am concerned with the holistic nature of Ojibwe society
and culture. I return to their beginning to understand how this holism shapes the value
seen in food. Understanding the history of the Ojibwe is important as it sets the stage for
the time of great separation. I describe this great separation through a series of losses;
land, youth, and food. These impacted the fabric of traditional Indigenous lifeways. The
losses are essential to understand before being able to fully grasp the significance of
why the Ojibwe food sovereignty movement is a means of regaining sovereignty and
self-sufficiency. In chapter three, I address the question, Why food? Using Munn’s
concepts of time and notions of the past, present and future to support my ideas, I
answer this question. I use the example of wild rice to illustrate this acknowledging
historical and symbolic past, and impacts on the present. Chapter four, the
“Transformative Power of Food” focuses again on the present time horizon, answering
the question, How food? Using Sherry Ortner’s thoughts on the “projects of agency,” I
analyze what I refer to as the agentic projects I came across in the field. These are
projects of food that communicate a range of goals using resistance, as well as inclusive
and culturally appropriate goals. “Envisioning New Horizons” expands to larger
themes. First, the state, which is still an influential force manipulating sovereignty on
the reservations. Second, geographical physical places, both created by the state, and the
sacred lived places of the Ojibwe. Next, created spaces, which are formed in response to
place. I will end with the new forms of participation that occur after the formation of
spaces of empowerment. I aim to build each chapter off the previous to take the reader
through a story of traditional cultural norms in Ojibwe society, to the new horizons of
sovereignty and self-sufficiency. I conclude by reiterating my research question, why
food is such an important communicator and summarize my most influential encounters
in the field.
30
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2 The Collective Nature of Things
During a meeting with Bob Shimek, he spoke of this intimate relationship with other
beings:
When we go out and harvest chokecherries, it’s not just about nurturing
our body, it’s about nurturing our soul and nurturing the plant that gave
them. That’s overlooked and when we take that tobacco and ask
permission to go and take from that tree so we can have life, we’re
reaffirming an ages old relationship; we take care of that tree, that tree
takes care of us. Maybe we’re crazy, but I honestly believe it’s true. When
we talk about animate nouns, things have life-like qualities including spirit.
They’re just like us and who knows how strong that spirit is if we don’t
take care of it (Shimek: Interviewed 5.8.2014).
The story of the Ojibwe people begins with Kitche Manitou, The Creator, who the
Ojibwe believe formed the materials from which all physical things are based, and gave
them each purpose. He created the plants, and the animals; the elder brothers of the
Anishanaabeg Ojibwe, or Original People, which points to the notion that plants and
animals in Ojibwe culture have a certain amount of spiritual weight and respect attached
to them. As the elder siblings of humanity, they signify the elders, and demand much
reverence. He then created humans and the natural laws that govern all life on Earth.
These laws of nature ensure the harmony and well-being of all things. They govern the
winds, water, fire, rock, and the rhythm and continuity of life and death (Peacock and
Wisuri 2002:19).
In the previous chapter, I provided background and context for the food systems and
food sovereignty movements, and detailed the key concepts that I will use as a
theoretical base for this research. From here, I wish to look back on the traditional and
spiritual practices of the Ojibwe people, as they play a key role in the mindset and
projects of the community at hand.
These relations are embedded in the Ojibwe language. Modaywin means, “we are all
related” in the Ojibwe language and is a significant aspect of life and culture. Words
are both gendered, and thought of as either animate or inanimate, bringing what are seen
as objects in English to life. The Ojibwe have a deep understanding and respect for the
languages of the non-human beings. This interrelatedness is innate in many Indigenous
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cultures. Listening to the wisdom of forests gained through many frosts, the whispers
of animals and flittings of birds, the quiet murmurs of the water and the rock, and the
lamenting winds are all languages understood and relied upon. The Ojibwe regard their
homelands as a gift from the Great Spirit, belonging to everyone in the tribe (Peacock
and Wisuri 2002:44). Horace Axtell, a Nez Perce elder once spoke of the collective
nature of the beings on earth. He was eloquently quoted in Peacock and Wisuri:
We must be reminded that all the things around us have a collective spirit.
Acknowledging the collective nature of things is another essential part of
our way of being. Some time ago I traveled to Red Cliff, Wisconsin the
home of my father and grandparents and of their parents. I am often called
to that place of our great Ojibwe homeland when I am in need of solace
and reflection. This particular time, I stopped and walked a pathway to a
bench my great grandfather had built overlooking the blue of Lake
Superior. I was overcome with a sense of awe and wonderment at the
collective spirit of that place. It was all around me - in the buzzing of
insects and the chattering of birds, in the hush of grasses as they bowed to
the wind, in the lapping sounds of the water on the rocks, in the blue of sky
and sparkling of sun off the waves, and in my own muffled voice. I could
feel the spirits of my father and great grandparents sitting on the bench
with me that day, and it was as though I saw the world with the same sense
of wonder that children, like my granddaughters, see the world with. The
past, present and future, all were a part of the collective spirit of that place
(Peacock and Wisuri 2002:45).
This is a powerful statement in that it embodies the idea that the past is never dead – it
lives through and around every being. Traditionally, notions of power in Indigenous
cultures are quite different from that of Western cultures. Power is not possessed by
humans to be held over other beings, nor does it act to hold other beings in place. There
is an inherent respect and acknowledgement of other beings within Native culture.
While visiting the non-profit organization Dream of Wild Health in Hugo, Minnesota, I
had the privilege of experiencing several traditional Native American practices and
observed this in person. On June 28th
, I was invited to attend a wild-edible gathering
and feast with a group of around ten other visitors. Dream of Wild Health holds many
monthly gatherings with community members, which have become increasingly popular
over the last several years. This event was held to gather Wild Potatoes, which grow in
abundance along roadsides in Minnesota in late June.
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Figure 4: Hope and Ernie Dream of Wild Health
Before setting out with our shovels and gloves, we were asked to join Ernie Whiteman,
the organization’s Cultural Director and Spiritual Leader in a prayer, tobacco offering,
and sage smudging. He started with a small introduction to the ceremony. “We begin
our day every day with a sacred circle. We live in that circle, it’s the circle of life and it
encompasses our everyday. The circle is very important to our culture.” As he spoke,
burning sage was passed around the circle of guests along with a small bowl of tobacco,
which we were told to take a pinch of. Everyone in turn scooped up the smoke and
wafted it over their heads and bodies. He explained that cleansing with sage smoke is
an ancient practice and that tobacco is also a vital part of Native American culture. It is
traditionally tended by the men, and is considered the reincarnation of ancestors, which
must be treated with the utmost respect. After introducing us to the tradition of sage
smudging and offering tobacco, Ernie began a prayer:
Grandfathers we thank you for this wonderful day you have given us. We
thank you for bringing everyone together in this circle today grandfathers.
Look down on us and guide us today in everything we do, grandfathers.
We t Thank you grandfathers for that wonderful sun, the air we breathe,
the land we walk upon, and the waters, we thank you for the gift you give
us every single day, grandfathers. Thank you for giving us these sacred
plants we will be out looking for guide us in a good way. We thank you for
the wonderful things that we grow here grandfathers. Help us to take care
of these things. We thank you for all the animals and creatures you give us,
the animals that are in the earth and in the water. Teach us to live in
harmony and respect and honor these animals grandfathers (Whiteman:
Prayer 28.06.14).
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After this quiet respectful ceremony, each of us spread our pinch of tobacco at the feet
of a small tree. This was an offering to be given before picking the ancestors. We then
met Hope Flannigan, who is an expert gatherer and native plant specialist. She lay out a
series of plants that she had picked earlier that day and began:
We always start with tobacco ‘cause we’re picking our relatives today.
What I’ve been taught is that every plant has its gift to the people. One of
my teachers was reiterating that when I went to see her she was talking
about when the trickster was here and he named everything and that’s
when they offered up ‘I’m going to do this for the people, I’m going to do
this for the people’ and all the plants and animals were eager to help us so
we need to show that respect right back to them. What I’ve always heard or
know to be true either has every plant has a gift of food, utility, or
medicine. If we don’t know what it is, that just means we don’t know what
it is -that’s not their fault, that’s on us. A lot of them have so many gifts
just on one little plant. I was so so happy to find these and that they
showed themselves to me. If they show themselves to you, oh you’re so
lucky. They are very rare. There is a Dakota teaching that sometimes
they’d find food caches of wild potato or turnip of the mice or the voles.
These are wonderful food so you can’t steal from them - they’re living just
like us! So you would always make sure you would give a food offering to
them if you found a food cache of wild potatoes. If you could find a cache
of them, you might put corn in them to say thank you… (Flannigan:
Interviewed 28.06.2014)
Before we left to gather the potatoes, she recited a little prayer:
I ask that I be guided today so that we respect the plants in their home.
This isn’t our home; it’s their home. Plants are our older brothers and
sisters. We must encourage them to live and give their gifts. I ask that the
spirit take pity on me if I do things in an inappropriate or incorrect way
(Flannigan: Prayer 28.06.14).
Here the historical differences between Indigenous and Western ideas of ownership,
utility and power were clearly presented. The concept of property and ownership is
commonplace in a Western philosophy. Yet property using an anthropological
definition is not inherently personal and private, but changes based on one’s society.
Hoebel is quoted in Hann’s book “Property Relations: Renewing Anthropological
Tradition” stating:
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Property is found in social relations rather than in any inherent attributes of
the thing or object that we call property. Property in other words is not a
thing, but a network of social relations that governs the conduct of people
with respect to the use and disposition of things (Hann 1998:5).
This quote explains the difference in ideology between the dominant western ideology
and that of Indigenous peoples. Dominant western ideology often attaches monetary or
use value to objects, ignoring the inherent or spiritual value. Yet as Hope and Bob
explain, these beings are our relatives, who have spirits and are there to help us.
Through this, we must do the same to help them. The connectedness they illuminate
may shed light on the power of food as a communicator in Indigenous communities.
Lived examples such as this reflect the themes of respect and reciprocity, holding in it
the past, while creating the potential for positive future actions. The idea that a food
system is like an ecosystem and that care must be taken to balance the relationship
between its components is a key part of Ojibwe identity and tradition, yet during the
past century, many factors acted to dismantle this mindset.
2.1 The Lost Past
The Indigenous understanding of the world’s workings and focus on the notions of
respect, interdependence, and relations was dealt a significant blow after the
introduction of Europeans to North America. William Warren states that the Ojibwe
affirm that the coming of the Europeans was prophesized by one of their elders, who
said he knew they would be removed from their lands and that the coming of the whites
would eventually lead to the end of the world (Peacock and Wisuri 2002).
As the United States grew in population and power, many Indigenous groups were
forced to accommodate European ideals. There were many things that significantly
impacted the self-sufficiency of Ojibwe communities during the past two centuries.
These included treaties made between the US government and Indian tribes and bands,
the creation of boarding schools, which aimed to stamp out traditional practices and
language, and more recently, the loss of Indigenous crop diversity, privatization of
Native seed, and the introduction of genetically modified organisms (GMOs). These
aspects worked together to erode the structure of native communities.
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2.1.1 Signing Away the Past: Treaties
“They made us many promises, more than I can remember, but they only kept but one;
they promised to take our land and they took it” (Red Cloud qtd. in Weeks). Michael
Rogin quoted in Howard Zinn’s People’s History of the United States shows
statistically the significance of this breaking of Native land. “In 1820, 120,000 Indians
lived east of the Mississippi. By 1944, fewer than 30,000 were left. Most of them had
been forced to migrate westward” (Rogin qtd. in Zinn 1995:124).
One of the most important aspects of this dependency is what is known as “the treaty
period”, which lasted from 1783 to 1889. In this period, dozens of treaties were signed
between sovereign nations; meaning the tribes and the US government. There are three
major types of treaties, which acted as contracts between these sovereign bodies. These
included land cession treaties, peace treaties, and reservation creators. This is one of the
most complex chapters in the relationship between the United States government and
the Native peoples of North America. Complexity aside, the goals of the US
government and the means taken to achieve them are clear. The next page presents a
map of the movement of the Ojibwe people from the eastern coast inland to the Great
Lakes region. It illustrates the most influential treaties and the impacts they had.
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Fig
ure
5:
Rep
rese
nta
tio
n o
f T
rea
ties
an
d O
jib
we
Mig
rati
on
(D
on
lin
Fie
ldn
ote
s)
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Figure 6: Symbolic Petition brought to Washington by Ojibwe delegates in 1849 (Wisuri
and Peacock)
Before the creation of the state of Minnesota in the mid 1850’s, tribal leaders signed
treaties with the federal government regarding land rights, hunting and fishing
privileges, and payment for land, amongst other things. American Indians relinquished
this rights the title to their lands and reserved the remaining rights, for themselves.
According to Truer, the Ojibwe word for “reservation” is “Ishkonigan,” which in
English means “leftovers” (Truer 2012:39). He describes the Treaty of 1837 in “Rez
Life.” In 1837, the American government and representatives from Ojibwe bands
across Minnesota and Wisconsin met to discuss the trade of land for money. Those
groups who signed the treaties were still allowed to live on large tracts of land across
the region and hunt, fish and trap on it.
In payment for the land rights, the government would pay them (in US
dollars) the following every year for twenty years: 9,500 in cash, 19,000 in
goods, 3,000 for establishing blacksmith shops, 1,000 for farmers, and 500
for tobacco.
Below are some of the relevant clauses to the Ojibwe people of Minnesota (Minnesota
Indian Affairs Council):
Treaty of 1837: ARTICLE 5. The privilege of hunting, fishing, and
gathering the wild rice, upon the lands, the rivers and the lakes included in
the territory ceded, is guaranteed to the Indians, during the pleasure of the
President of the United States.
This article sounds like it benefits and protects the Ojibwe by guaranteeing them the
right to hunt, fish, and gather upon the lands ceded to them. Yet there are a few words
that must be noted, for instance, that this is only during the pleasure of the president of
the United States.
Treaty with the Chippewa: 1854: Article 1. The Chippewas of Lake
Superior hereby cede to the United States all the lands heretofore owned by
them in common with the Chippewas of the Mississippi.
Here, the US government has used the term ‘ceded’ to state that the Chippewa (Ojibwe)
bands of Lake Superior and the Mississippi have, for all intents and purposes, sold their
39
land to the US government, marking a lack of acknowledgement that Indigenous views
of ownership were significantly different from that of the government.
1854: Article 11. The Indians shall not be required to move from the
homes hereby set apart for them. And such of them as reside in the
territory hereby ceded, shall have the right to hunt and fish therein, until
otherwise ordered by the President.
While this looks benevolent in that the Ojibwe were allowed to stay in the homes
reserved by the US government. Yet this is only until further notice by the president.
While some presidents were more sympathetic towards Native Americans, others were
not, requiring them to move sometimes thousands of miles from their homelands.
1855: Article 1. The said Indians do further fully and entirely relinquish
and convey to the United States, any and all right, title, and interest, of
whatsoever nature the same may be, which they may now have in, and to
any other lands in the Territory of Minnesota or elsewhere.
Here it is clear the intention of the US government. The Ojibwe were required to fully
relinquish the title, right and interest of their land within Minnesota. This will become
more and more significant after resources, such as deposits of iron ore, were found in
much of northcentral Minnesota.
For the chiefs, the right to hunt fish and live on their land while receiving supplemental
income from the government was a fine deal. Unfortunately, no mention was made of
logging, which would become the dominant fuel of the industrial age in the United
States, or of the small print noting that the rights to hunt, fish and trap were during the
pleasure of the president of the United States, which changed during the Taylor
administration (Truer 2012:70-71). Many feel that the treaty rights retained by the tribes
were ignored after the territory of Minnesota assumed statehood and began regulating
its own natural resources. The picture on the next page makes an emotional statement,
depicting different clans bonding together to protect their homelands. It is said that the
lines coming from their hearts and eyes represent their connection to their wild ricing
lakes (Peacock and Wisuri 2002: 49).
40
The Department of Natural Resources in the state of Minnesota is in charge of
managing and regulating all hunting and fishing activities in the state. Those
regulations have been imposed on tribal members despite the reserved rights stated in
the treaties. Tribal members exercising those rights are often given citations, taken to
court, fined and had their equipment confiscated for harvesting fish or game without a
state license (Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission). This has led to
serious confrontations among both tribal and state governments and the citizens of the
state of Minnesota, which will be touched upon later.
2.1.2 Loss of a Generation: Boarding schools
During the mid-1800’s, the US government devised a new system for assimilating
Native Americans into white society. Henry Price, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs
stated in 1881:
Savage and civilized life cannot live and prosper on the same ground. One
of the two must die. If the Indians are to be civilized and become happy
and prosperous persons,which is certainly the object and intention of our
government, they must learn our language and adopt our modes of life
(Adams 2002:156).
Reformers began a campaign to assimilate Native children through the introduction of
on and off reservation boarding schools. This campaign assumed the position that if
young native children were taught the ways of white society at an early age, they may
adopt a more ‘civilized’ existence, and obtain the skills to live in the Anglo-American
world. Annual congressional appropriations given to Indian education increased from
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20,000 in 1877 to 1,364,368 dollars in 1890, while attendance in Indian boarding
schools tripled from 3, 598 to 12,232 during the same years (Adams 2002:157). While
young girls were taught to sew, clean, and cook traditional European food, the boys
were taught to use industrial tools, produce food through traditional European methods
of agriculture, and practice masonry. These measures to introduce young Native
children to more European livelihoods hoped to assimilate the next generation of Native
Americans into the capitalist economy. As Adams puts it, this transformation “sought to
relieve the government of its moral responsibility to feed and clothe a people once
proud and independent but now reduced to indolence and dependency” (Adams
2002:164). These ideas were largely ineffective due to the fact that many Indigenous
cultures had opposing values to those of the capitalist American society. Property
ownership, individualism, and competition were foreign concepts to many tribes who
valued communal sharing and cooperation.
Figure 7: Grand Portage Ojibwe Boarding School, 1889 (Wisuri and Peacock)
Over time, boarding schools and the policies implemented by the United States
government began to shape the future of Native communities across the country.
Despite efforts to assimilate Native Americans into white society, the majority of Native
communities were instead blighted by poverty and alcoholism. By ensuring that the
youngest generation was well-versed in the commonalities of Anglo-American life, old
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ways of being began to drift into the background. While some had been warned by their
relatives that their traditions and cultural identity would be challenged, others listened to
the new teachings. One Shawnee boy by the name of Thomas Wildcat Alford, recalled
the pleas of his chief to remember the dignity and the integrity of his tribe while being
warned not to accept the white man’s religion. He was quoted in Adams recalling this
experience. “But as time passed … the interests of my teachers became stronger, their
pleas more persistent, and I could not ignore the subject. I would come to know that
deep in my soul, Jesus Christ was my savior” (Adams 2002:166). In a conversation
over a fresh trout dinner with Francis Drouillard, of Grand Marais, I was told a little
about the loss of language in the community and the impact of boarding school on one
of his friends. When he was young, he states,
All the old Indian ladies would get together and gossip and they’d speak
Ojibwe. I wish I spoke it, but I just know a few words, but Staci [his
daughter] speaks it. The natives weren’t allowed to speak it, it was awful.
We had a good friend that was in the boarding school. He said, ‘they didn’t
beat me, they fed me, but it made me hard. It was like I’d lost a child. My
wife doesn’t like it that I’m so hard’ (Drouillard: Interviewed 10.06.14).
By the mid 1920’s, some began to question to legitimacy of eradicating Native
American identity and tradition through assimilation and boarding schools. By this
time, Native Americans were among the poorest people in the United States. According
to Taylor, less than 2 percent had an income of over $500 a year, while more than half
had incomes below $200 a year. This is shocking considering that the average income
across all industries in the US at the time was $1,407 (US Embassy). Lewis Meriam,
of the Brookings Institute, carried out an independent publication entitled, The Problem
with Indian Administration, which concluded that, “Provisions of welfare, health, and
education of the people on the reservations were grossly inadequate” (Taylor 2002:175).
This harsh criticism became known as the Meriam Report and began a new era of
Native American policy and spurred the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 (Peacock
and Wisuri 2002). The Indian Reorganization Act ended allotments and the further sale
of Indian lands, while putting in place the infrastructure for tribes to organize their own
tribal governments.
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2.1.3 The Loss of the Ancestors
To a people who value and respect plants and other beings for their intrinsic, symbolic,
and cultural sake, the modern agricultural age meant an end to their way of living. This
new era put a serious burden on traditional practices of harvesting and cultivating native
varieties of food and impacted every aspect of Ojibwe life, from health to economics.
The History of “Big Agriculture”
Since the Roosevelt administration, the US government has taken an active role in
agriculture. Today, this is done through the “Farm Bill,” which is a package of federal
farm and food legislation that represents billions of dollars in government expenditures
and sets the farm, food, and rural policy goals and priorities for the United States. In
the simplest terms, the Farm Bill has a tremendous impact on farming livelihoods, how
food is grown, and what kinds of foods are grown, both off and on the
reservations. Since the Nixon Administration, farmers have been incentivized to
increase the size of their farm, which forces small-scale farms out of the market. Over
the last decade, the percentage of subsidies going to large farms has doubled to 54
percent and the average size of a US farm has doubled as well. This significant growth
in the size of farms has had unforeseen consequences of limiting the diversity of crops
grown, and of forcing smaller scale producers to either consolidate or move off their
farms (Donlin 2014).
This can be seen on Reservations such as White Earth where larger and larger swaths of
land are being used to grow commodity crops. When driving through the region, it is
easy to spot the large irrigation systems stretching for miles.
Health and the American Food System
As stated earlier, 16.1 percent of Native Americans have diabetes, making it the highest
age adjusted prevalence of diabetes among any racial group in the United States
(Regaining Food Sovereignty 2013). One study found that in 104 adult Ojibwe Indians
from Minnesota and Wisconsin, fat intake supplied 37% of their daily caloric intake,
saturated fat 13%, and sugars 13% (DeGonzague et al. 1999). According to Michael
Pollan, 60 percent of government subsidies go to four main commodity crops including
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corn, soybeans, wheat, and rice. These foods also make up 66 percent of the calories
consumed by the average American (Pollan 2006). Subsidies that support commodity
crops, but not fruits and vegetables, have shaped the eating habits of Americans and
their waistlines. In 2012, over one-third of American adults were obese. Beginning in
the 1970s, high fructose corn syrup was used as a way to make the most of the corn
surplus and provide a cheap alternative to sugar. High fructose corn syrup now replaces
sugar in a huge portion of processed products in US supermarkets.
Several studies show that the use of common pesticides on crops could be linked to
higher rates of rare forms of cancer A study by the National Cancer Institute found that
farming communities have higher rates of leukemia, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, multiple
myeloma, and soft tissue sarcoma, as well as cancers of the skin, stomach, brain, and lip
(National Cancer Institute). While at a meeting titled, “Toxic Taters” at the University
of Minnesota Duluth, I met with the Toxic Taters Coalition, which is a group of several
organizations including the WELRP. The Coalition works to end pesticide drift in
agricultural communities, particularly those in which RDO potatoes (used as
McDonald’s french fries) are grown. Some of the attendees were residents of farming
communities who were exposed to excessive amounts of pesticides on potato farms and
were forced to leave their homes. One attendee owned a small farm in potato growing
country and suffered from health problems and sensitivity to pesticides. She mentioned
several others who spoke of thyroid problems in domestic pets, severe birth defects in
colts, sheep dying of stomach cancer, miscarriages in people, children with cancer
who’s mothers were exposed during pregnancy, neurological problems, and increased
rates of mysterious conditions during potato rotation years. Many of these farms are on
or near the White Earth Reservation.
The Economics of Access to Healthy Foods
While on our way to the foodshed mapping, we stopped briefly to pick up coffee
creamer at the local “grocery store”. The store was more of a gas station, or
convenience store combined with a bus stop. It was quite crowded, and most of the cars
parked outside sported Reservation license plates. The aisles were filled with processed
foods such as chips, Betty Crocker microwaveable dinners, and prepackaged burgers.
The refrigerated glass doors of the coolers containing sandwiches and soda were
45
marked with signs stating they no longer accepted Electronic Benefit Transfers (food
stamps) for those purchases. I wondered if this was due to their lack of nutritional
value. There were no fruits aside from a basket with apples and bananas near the cash
register. There were no green vegetables either. This provided a perfect example of the
serious barrier to healthy food options facing Ojibwe communities.
In addition to significant health issues associated with the dominant agricultural system
in the US, many lack access to healthier options. The term “food desert” was first
coined in the UK during the 1990s, but has become a common way to express a
geographical area that lacks access to affordable fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and
other foods that make up a full and healthy diet. Many Americans living in rural,
minority, or low-income areas are subjected to food deserts and may be unable to access
affordable, healthy foods, leaving their diets lacking essential nutrients (CDC 2002). It
is a common problem to be caught in a vicious cycle in which one lacks of means to pay
for healthy food and must subsist on an insufficient diet. Often, one is then faced with
serious health problems as a result, and must take on significant debt in order to pay for
treatment, pushing them farther into poverty. The overconsumption of heavily
processed corn based foods is in many cases an issue of access and class. While those
with means and an understanding of the food system are turning to the slow, local,
organic food movements, the vast majority of families in the US are unable to access
expensive produce from the local coop or farmer’s market, and may not have a
knowledge of the issues associated with the current food system (Donlin 2014).
Privatization of Seed
In recent decades, the politics of seed has become complicated. As universities
developed and companies patented new varieties of plants with drought, pest and stress
resistance, saving seeds became a legal issue. Cases began to crop up with companies
suing farmers for infringing on patent rights. In early 2014, the company Monsanto was
upheld by the US Supreme court for having filed over 140 lawsuits against farmers for
planting the company’s genetically-engineered seeds without permission, while settling
around 700 other cases without suing (RT 2014). In the 1940s, non-native farmers
developed their own processing plants and began harvesting wild rice using combine
harvesters, thus initiating the decline of Ojibwe involvement in wild rice production. By
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the late 1960s, non-Ojibwe growers had succeeded in growing wild rice in paddies.
Meanwhile, researchers at the University of Minnesota and the University of Wisconsin,
Madison, developed non-shattering wild rice strains, better harvesting equipment, and
better disease control, thus increasing large-scale commercial production of wild rice.
By 1986, California producers had become so successful in growing paddy wild rice
that there was a glut on the market. The resulting drop in prices undercut one of the
most important stable sources of income for the remaining Ojibwe ricers (Streiffer
2005). Wild rice is not only being genetically modified by corporate interests and
research institutions, but has also been subjected to industrialization and large-scale
production. Former Executive Director of WELRP, Winona LaDuke claimed that the
diversity of wild rice is essential in order to ensure its survival in the face of changing
weather and climate patterns. Diversity of the plant ensures resiliency and increases the
chance of a good harvest regardless of the year’s weather (LaDuke 2011). She voiced
her concerned about the commodification of wild rice in a Ted Talk lecture held in St.
Paul in 2011
We have seen a 75 percent decrease in the diversity of cultivated crops –
many of these have become extinct. The remaining seeds are also owned
by fewer and fewer people. Seven corporations own most of the seed. We
are losing our ancestors through the loss of this genetic material. We are
concerned about our responsibility to our relatives. These plants have
history and are culturally significant to our creation story. That’s why
we’re fighting the genetic engineering and patenting of our rice (LaDuke
2011).
As Laduke states, traditional methods of food production are imbued with more than
just a means of feeding one’s community. The Ojibwe feel that through this
disintegration of their food systems, they have lost touch with their relatives. Ojibwe
communities aren’t just impacted by the spiritual, there are also serious health
consequences associated with industrial forms of agriculture as observed during the
Toxic Taters meeting. Yet despite the high health risks, and loss of symbolic cultural
connections, fast food and heavily processed diets still dominate.
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2.2 Loss of Relations
I have offered a concise overview of the pressures, problems and historical injustices
endured by Indigenous communities across the United States. It is becoming
indisputable within American society that the systematic and institutionalized
destruction of native cultural identity has led to significant impacts to Indigenous
culture and communal well-being. Some (Yellow Horse Brave Heart and DeBruyn)
compare the grief and historical trauma felt by the Native peoples’ of North America to
that of the Holocaust . Witbeck et al. conducted a longitudinal study of Native
American families using the Historical Loss Scale and found that,
Frequencies indicate that the current generation of American Indian adults
have frequent thoughts pertaining to historical losses and that they
associate these losses with negative feelings (Witbeck et al 2004:119).
The Native peoples of the United States were confronted with a breakup of their culture,
a loss of the significant relations that shaped their understanding of the world. This
provides a background for the present reality on Reservations across the state of
Minnesota. Understanding these upheavals is necessary in the understanding of current
norms and efforts for future success on reservations.
The loss of Indigenous lands and the privatization of what Native peoples feel are their
relatives, is the basis for the current actions of the food sovereignty movement. As
Shimek put it, “Things were put on hold, not lost. Food sovereignty is proactive. It’s a
political, cultural, social, religious, health thing” (Shimek: Meeting 8.7.2014). Food
sovereignty is a natural way to shape the desires of communities and reconnect the
broken pieces – to work towards a future that holds something tangible and good. This
quote provides a perfect example of how food represents a horizon for the positive and
good, and shapes prospects for the future. In the following chapter, I will use Munn’s
work to deepen the understanding of why food is an effective communicator of
sovereignty, resilience, and empowerment, as it relates to notions of interconnectedness
in Ojibwe culture.
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49
3 The Case of Wild Rice: Bringing
the Past into the Present
In the previous chapter, I illustrated the importance of connectedness and relations in
Ojibwe society through lived examples. After exemplifying this worldview, I provided
an overview of how these connections were systematically impacted by colonialization;
loss of land, loss of culturally appropriate education, and loss of traditional foods. I
ended the chapter with a small ray of hope – a quote from Bob Shimek exclaiming that
these connections and relations were never lost – they were simply put on hold. He
considered the food sovereignty movement a concrete means of regaining those
connections. In this chapter, I will ask the questions, why is food such an effective
communicator? How does food form direction? What are the past relations held within
food? I will answer these questions using examples from the field and with guiding
ideas from Nancy Munn’s description of past, present, future relationships. Later in this
chapter, I use the example of wild rice to illustrate how food represents such an
important cultural object, coming to life to structure the actions taken by communities.
As stated before, Munn refers to a unifying framework of “indigenous historical
consciousness or historical memory: the experiential formulation of the past within any
given present” (Munn 1990: 2). She describes the example of the Apache culture, in
which people in the present feel that they are standing in their ancestors’ tracks. This is
another way to describe lived history (Munn 1992:113). This idea of feeling “the then
and there in the here and now” (113) was visible during the native plant discussion I
took part in at Dream of Wild Health. In this case, this “lived history” was not in the
form of a place, but in the form of an item. Ernie, upon seeing a wild Prairie Turnip,
was brought back to his childhood. “I have not seen these for a long time… my
grandmother used to have these hanging in her kitchen. It brought back memories of her
when I saw these.” (Ernie Whiteman: Conversation 28.6.2014). Upon expressing this
history, Hope Flannigan was overjoyed, as if Ernie and the plant were two relatives that
had not met in many years. Ways of attending to the past create modes of apprehending
certain futures (Munn 1992:115). Here, it is clear that the Ojibwe have a unique way of
speaking about food and plants, expressing a past connection and relationship to them.
This points to the possibility that these relationships can impact the potential paths of
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the future. The impacts of food are not static, but provide a horizon of possibilities for
future events. The Ojibwe reach into their positive past of relations and respect to
address the more recent injustices thus redirecting their potential futures. Much like
Munn’s analysis of the impacts of the Kula Shell exchange in Gawan society, this
chapter analyzes the impacts of cultural events around food on the relationship between
the past, present and future in Ojibwe communities.
3.1 Traditional and Communal Significance
Munn describes the means through which social worlds, events, and relations emerge
within the experience of one’s immediate reality (Munn, 1: 1990). She states that
previously, theorists such as Giddens (1979) and Anderson (1983), failed to consider
symbolic processes whereby distanced events or relations can become meaning
horizons in an actor’s present (1990:1). As shown above, relation to and respect for the
non-human is particularly important in an indigenous mindset. Despite these
connections being formed in the past, non-profits such as Dream of Wild Health exist to
pull those notions forward, acknowledging them in a positive present event horizon.
This relationship can be extended to food, which in the majority of societies, is identity,
culture, tradition, as well as a necessity for present and future survival. In many Native
American cultures, the harvest of revered staples was celebrated with thanksgiving
feasts and rituals. Laduke and Alexander state that Seeds are sacred heirlooms, which
are ‘witnesses to the past’(LaDuke and Alexander:2). The great spiritual and societal
importance of food has been passed down from generation to generation bringing with it
significant cultural weight. Ceremonies, practices, taboos, and oral traditions follow,
giving influence to actions in the past on the present, while shaping the future.
Food grown and harvested is thought of as medicine for the mind and body, which must
be maintained. In the publication “Food is Medicine”,
Growing food is the centerpiece of the Indigenous relationship to birth and
the land. By planting and nurturing seeds, Native peoples call forth and
honor life through an intricate ceremonial cycle at the heart of Indigenous
cultures. For thousands of years, the traditional practices of gardening,
harvesting, fishing, and hunting provided for most Native American
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communities not only essential nutrition, but also the essential physical
activities required for good health (LaDuke and Alexander: 2).
The connectivity and relationship between people and plants used for food is reflected
in this quote. The importance of honoring life, tradition, and ritual is not something that
exists in the past, but is a vital aspect of a healthy life in the present. It is this
relationship that makes clear the reasons why food can be seen as an active shaper of
the future.
Ojibwe diets were traditionally diverse and highly dependent upon the time of year and
geographical location of the particular band. Frances Densmore, renowned
anthropologist and ethnographer, chronicled Indigenous traditions and life, and noted
the traditional diets of the Ojibwe people.
Figure 8: Traditional Diet of the Northwestern Ojibwe
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Staples included wild rice, maple sugar, corn, squash and beans, known as the three
sisters, as well as game, fish, and berries found in the region (Densmore 2004). The
Ojibwe calendar reflects the significance of staple foods, in which months are named
for both the foods that are in abundance at that time of the year, as well as the land and
weather patterns associated with the season. Months, as seen of the following page, are
based on the lunar cycle, and are given the names Budding Moon, Strawberry Moon,
Sugarbushing Moon, Ricing Moon, and Leaves Falling off Trees Moon. These names
reflect the deep understanding and connection to the landscape, as well as food’s
centrality in Ojibwe culture. Practices such as maple syruping, spear fishing, and wild
ricing created a rhythm of the seasons that has been present for centuries. In this way,
the past is clearly present through the seasonal food gathering practices associated with
a particular time of year.
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Figure 9: Names of Months for Northeastern Ojibwe
3.2 Wild Rice: The Sacred Staple
While there are many foods that carry significant cultural weight, wild rice (Zizania
palustris), or manoomin in Ojibwe, is not only a vital staple to the Ojibwe diet, but in
their view, a gift from the Creator, making it a sacred food (Indigenous Food Systems
Network). According to Vennum, almost universally, Native American cultures have
passed down stories attributing the discovery and importance of their staple foods to the
supernatural. In the case of the Ojibwe, the Great Megis (seashell) instructed them to
“go to the place where the food grows on the water” (Peacock and Wisuri 2002:25).
The Ojibwe migrated from the Eastern coast of the United States west towards the Great
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Lakes region, where wild rice and other food sources grew in abundance on fresh water
lakes. Oral legends, as described in stories of the cultural hero, Nanobozho, point to
manoomin as a crucial element into the realm of the supernatural and its interaction with
animals and humans. Here is a retelling of the oral tale of Nanobozho (here called
Waynaboozhoo) as he discovers wild rice by students Becky Maki and Heather
Cardinal:
For several winters there had been very little food and the people had
suffered. Waynaboozhoo wanted to put a stop to the suffering, so he went
into the woods and fasted for four days in a wigwam. On the fourth day he
started on a long walk, and as he walked, he thought about how to keep his
people from starving. He continued walking until he came to the edge of a
river. By that time, he was very tired, so he lay down to rest and fell asleep.
Waynaboozhoo awoke late in the night when the moon was high in the
sky. He walked along the edge of the river and saw what looked like
dancers in the water. Waynaboozhoo thought he saw the feathers of the
headdresses worn by Ojibwa men. He walked a little closer and asked if he
could dance along. He danced and danced until he grew tired. He lay down
and fell asleep again. The next morning when he awoke everything was
calm. Waynaboozhoo remembered the dancers but thought it all had been a
dream. Then he looked out at the tassels waving above the water. He
waded out and found long seeds that hung from these tassels. He gathered
some of these seeds in the palm of his hand and carried them with him
back to his wigwam. There he continued fasting. Once again he grew tired
and fell asleep, and as he slept, he had a vision. In the vision he learned
that he had gathered wild rice and that it was to be eaten. He tasted the rice
and found that it was good. Waynaboozhoo returned to the village and told
his people about the rice. Together, they harvested enough to provide food
for the long winter (Maki and Cardinal).
Symbolism often veils deeper meanings and tales of Ojibwe culture. For the Ojibwe,
this meant incorporating the manoomin cycle into their most deeply held religious
beliefs, ethical codes and explanations of natural phenomena (Vennum 1988:60).
Many members of ricing tribes believe that humans cannot sow rice and that it only
grows where the spirits want it. Poor yields, violent storms, and abundant harvests are
all dictated by the spirits (Vennum 1984:60). There are traditionally many ceremonies
and rituals around manoomin. These practices have been brought into the present day.
One can still see such examples including leaving manoomin on the graves of the
deceased, and abstaining from harvesting the food while menstruating or mourning. It
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has been said that manoomin is the first solid food one eats as a baby and the last solid
food one eats as an elder (White Earth Wild Rice Harvest). Today wild rice is a topic of
everyday conversation and years and events are marked by the manoomin harvest
(Vennum 1984:59). Author and Anthropologist Howard Papp, who has spent most of
his life within an Ojibwe community, wrote about his observations regarding wild rice.
As in the past, wild rice is a great connector. I have seen it appear at
Christmas time. A pound or so, in a small plastic sack tied with a short red
ribbon. While a house might be filled with chatter of a family gathering, an
uncle will step into another room and reappear with a small sack. He hands
it to a niece who lives in a distant state. She accepts the gift, might say very
little, or nothing at all, but might give him a quick hug. This is classic
Ojibwe gift giving (Papp 2001).
The ricing harvest was spoken of multiple times in conversations I observed while in
the field. No matter the original topic of conversation, almost all of the discussions I had
with informants led back to wild rice at some point. These oral traditions and rituals are
exemplars of Munn’s emphasis that events and relations can be brought back into a
lived reality and into a present event horizon. Events such as the rice harvest, which
occurs every August, mark the rhythmic return of the past in the present day, re-
invigorating Indigenous values such as honor, respect, and thankfulness.
3.3 Processing Wild Rice
Wild rice grows in the shallow waters and fertile alluvial soil deposited by glaciers
during the last ice age. According to Vennum, there is evidence that early Indians
settled along the ancient Lake Agassiz, and have been harvesting wild rice for
thousands of years (Vennum 1984). Staci Drouillard of Grand Marais recently
interviewed Susan Zimmerman, a member of the Grand Portage Band of Ojibwe. She
spoke of the significance of wild ricing and hunting to her upbringing.
…When you rice, you thank the creator and give tobacco. The women
always took care of the wild rice. The men harvested and the women
processed it. It’s a basic part of who I am (Anishanaabe Way 2012).
Wild rice is harvested using a canoe, which slides through the tall grass without
breaking it. The canoe was maneuvered through the rice beds using a forked pole,
which protected the plants’ root systems. In a process called knocking, the Ojibwe used
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sticks, called knockers, to knock the kernels of rice into the bottom of the canoe. After
harvesting, the rice was dried to prevent molding on woven mats or animal skins. After
the kernels dried, they were parched over a fire to roast the rice. This gives the rice its
characteristic black shine. Next is hulling the rice from its shell. Traditionally, this
practice was known as “dancing” the rice. A small pit was dug in the ground and lined
with wooden slats and deer hide. Special knee-high moccasins were worn during the
dancing. Lastly, the rice was winnowed, a process of tossing the rice in a bowl.
Ideally, the wind would catch the chaff and blow it out of the bowl, leaving the edible
rice intact (Allen et al).
Ellen Hawkins, a retired wilderness ranger from northern Minnesota mentioned how
meaningful it was to observe young Ojibwe children eating the rice. “They were eating
food that was harvested, processed and prepared by their aunts, uncles, parents and
friends. Most of us have nothing in our diets that compares to that” (Hawkins:
Interviewed 18.4.2015).
3.4 Connectedness to Land and Spirit
Being able to make a good income from ricing while supporting other community
members seems to be a means of power within Ojibwe communities. The themes
apparent when speaking of wild rice are pride, tradition, family and communal relations.
Rice seems to hold in it a deep intrinsic connection to the Ojibwe – the ability to heal,
support and connect. “It’s hard work but we’re proud to feed our families, feed our
bellies, and feed our souls” (White Earth Wild Rice Harvest 2013). This quote is from
an elder, who was interviewed after a day of ricing. He was asked what wild rice means
to the Ojibwe people:
Wild rice is our livelihood - that’s why we’re located here. Rice season is
never more than 11 months away. I get out and make rice for my family
and I give some of it away to people who need it if there’s a funeral or
something. I rice with my friends, I just enjoy being out here. I’ve been
ricing for 60 some years (What Does Rice Mean to the Ojibwe People?
2008).
Here, the connection between wild rice the food and wild rice the communicator is
made clear. While supporting families, the grain also carries massages of kinship.
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Providing rice for those who need it or during times of grief instills the past cultural
significance of manoomin in the present day. Others have similar things to say about
wild rice. Bob Rice, of Minneapolis was quoted in “Original Local” stating,
“Everything in life revolves around wild rice – it’s how I know the seasons, the New
Year, everything” (Rice, qtd. in Erdrich 2013). Heid Erdrich, Ojibwe author and
teacher, describes a jar of wild rice found in her mother’s pantry,
I opened the jar and it smelled of parching kettles, wood fire and river
water all at once. Forty-four years old and I would eat that rice
today…Mom says she keeps it in a cool spot in the cellar and that she
would use it for a special occasion. I think of all the enormous moments in
our large family’s history: births, graduations, weddings, awards, more
births, deaths, times of need, and times of rejoicing, and I wonder what
occasion might be momentous enough (Erdrich 2013:33).
The concepts of self-sufficiency and pride are strong and deeply rooted. During my
interview over dinner with Francis Drouillard on July 10th
, I asked Francis if, when he
was growing up, his family was self-sufficient in terms of food. This was his response:
I look back on my life, and I don’t have nothing to complain about. I don’t.
I don’t have no hard feelings about nothing. Not my parents, nothing, you
know… They did what they could, there were seven of us and we never
went hungry, we never went on food stamps or any god dang
commodities… we always had food on the table. I have no hard feelings.
We learned you gotta work hard and you gotta stay honest and that’s how
you got fed… Damn right (Drouillard: Interviewed 10.7.2014).
It was clear the pride Francis felt in the fact that his family was able to make due and
live comfortably without any help from the government or others. While Francis could
well have made mention of being economically self-sufficient, or sufficient in terms of
housing or materials, he was exclaiming his pride in having enough food to feed their
family. Self-sufficiency with respect to food seemed to be a very sought after quality
and a sign of strength. It makes sense that the emotions that come with gathering wild
rice are that of pride and dignity – ricing combines the cultural and spiritual heritage of
the Ojibwe people, with the ability to acknowledge that past in the context of the 21st
century. Quoted in the publication Food is Medicine, Rowen White explains what’s at
stake:
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A cultural community that persists in its farming tradition does not simply
conserve indigenous seed stock because of economic justifications. The
seeds themselves become symbols, reflections of the people’s own spiritual
and aesthetic identity, and of the land that shaped them (LaDuke and
Alexander:17)
This quote reflects the notion that while wild rice provides economic stability to the
Ojibwe, it represents a much bigger relationship to the community, spirituality, and
cultural past. Wild rice represents a positive identity and pride that defines the Ojibwe
people and influences the broader perceptions of Indigenous lifestyles and life-ways to
Minnesotans. While on fieldwork, I asked what it was about food that made it so
important and effective as a communicator in the struggle to regain power within
Ojibwe communities. Frank Haney, the farm manager at Dream of Wild Health, had an
interesting response to this question as we talked over a lunch of fresh garden
vegetables and watermelon.
There’s so much value and tradition and culture in food. Food and
spirituality are at the center of things – food isn’t separate from that - it’s
all one thing in a tribal mindset. … You know, 300 years ago is when
native people drifted away from their traditional tribal
existence…European people, it’s a lot further back and they’re a lot more
separated from [their food]. But it’s always been my opinion that because
of that fact, native people have a much better chance of reconnecting to
their traditional food sources (Haney: Interviewed 07.2014).
In many cases, ricing is the only time of the year that allows one to spend several days
away from the office, hustle and bustle of everyday life, and the many distractions one
has in the modern age. It is an opportunity to return to the places of the past, where the
ancestors have harvested the sacred grain for hundreds, or even thousands of years. In a
recent conversation with Ellen Hawkins (Hawkins: Interviewed 18.4.2015), she
reminisced about the almost spiritual connection she felt to the land while canoeing in
ricing country. She noted how visible and present she felt, allowing herself to fully
acknowledge her surroundings. She seemed to feel transported by her senses to that
ancient ricing ground, so unchanged by time, the rhythmic knocking of the rice into the
boats, the sharpness of the tall grass, and the smell of late summer.
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3.5 Horizon of the Future
As the Minnesota State Grain, wild rice has an important place in the fabric of
Minnesotan tradition and identity. Non-native Minnesotans take pride in wild rice and
often give it as gifts and serve it with dinner to out of town guests. When buying wild
rice in grocery stores in Minnesota, you have quite a few options to choose from. All
the packages are similar, most sporting pictures of birch bark canoes, native women,
and claiming some connection to the Ojibwe people who have harvested the rice for
centuries. As a consumer, I always assumed that all wild rice was harvested from
Minnesota lakes, but as it happens, many of the packages are marked as ‘cultivated’ or
‘paddy rice’ and many have been shipped from California, where industrialized
cultivation of the grain has become the most profitable means of production. A few,
however, come from the Indigenous communities of northern Minnesota, where the rice
is harvested using traditional methods. These are harvested by hand and processed on
the Indian Reservations of Northern Minnesota and sold from small-scale facilities.
These facilities are real lived examples of the mission put forward by La Via Campesina
in their definition of food sovereignty.
Before the commodification and mass production of paddy rice, Ojibwe communities
supplied most of the rice consumed across the state. The ability to harvest and sell the
rice provided vital resources for families. David Truer describes his family’s
experience ricing.
In the 1950s when my mother was growing up, this was, for many, the
single major source of cash income for the year. If not the only source, it
was certainly the largest. In the 1950’s, green unprocessed rice fetched
around one dollar per pound. This was a lot of money. My grandfather,
grandmother, mother, aunt Barb, uncle Sonny and uncle Davey could make
600 dollars a day if the rice was good. A rice season could yield a few
thousand dollars – the cash needed to buy clothes, shoes, kerosene, flour,
lard, bullets, roofing material and everything they needed to stay dry,
warm, and fed for the winter (Truer 2012: 117).
Rice is traditionally harvested and processed by hand and sold, meaning economic
stability for many families over the winter months. With more and more rice being
grown in patties, production has increased, thus decreasing the cost of rice. While this is
good news for consumers, Native communities have suffered from the fall in prices. Yet
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the recent growth in Minnesota’s co-ops, which source wild rice from producers and the
recent enthusiasm for “locally grown foods” and “sustainable food systems” has drawn
Minnesotans’ interest back to the traditional methods of harvest still practiced in Ojibwe
communities. The market for native-grown and processed rice is growing across the
state. Winona LaDuke quoted two men who had brought 300 pounds of wild rice off
South Chippewa Lake saying, “This is the only job we can make $50 an hour at up
here” (LaDuke 2011). The significance of ricing still thrives culturally through creating
and sustaining relationships, defining identities, and building self-sufficiency.
While recalling past traditions and practices of wild rice, these communities are shaping
their future. The tremendous interconnectedness of cultural themes entwined with wild
rice and the role it plays economically in the present will likely have an impact on the
paths taken to community revitalization efforts. To say these communities are
“returning” to their traditional lifeways would also be a mistake – acknowledging the
importance of sacred staples is an advancement that takes into account progress and
changing norms. During fieldwork, I had the privilege of interviewing the chef Sean
Sherman, who makes a living bringing native traditional foods and dishes to the
mainstream. I asked him what motivated him to use his skills as a chef as a cultural
communicator. His response reflected a yearning to bring the knowledge of traditional
foods back to his community.
I feel that a culture without food is such a lost culture, but I also feel we
have a rare, albeit difficult, opportunity to bring back and re-write what is
known of Native American foods and cuisine and can only hope our future
generations will hold it as dear as other world cultures do with the food
from their homelands (Sherman: Interviewed 20.10.2013).
This quote perfectly encompasses Munn’s notions of past, present and future relations
and the ability of food to shape a positive future. Now is a time of transformational
change using Indigenous foods as their means of communication. In this chapter, I
explored the question of why food is an important communicator. Food is an example of
lived history bringing ancient traditions, sacred practices, and memories of the past into
the present. These are the past relations held within food. Wild rice embodies culture;
from traditional harvesting methods and a meaningful connection to the land, to the
feelings of pride and self-reliance it brings about.
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4 Transformative Power of Food:
The Role of Non Profits and the
Grassroots Movement
Thus far I have explained traditional ideas of Ojibwe relations, the systematic loss of
those relations, and have addressed why food is such an important communicator
through the example of wild rice. Wild rice exemplifies the reasons why food is so
important; it holds in it traditional, communal, economic, and historical significance. In
other words, food in the present inherently holds in it the past. Food is both a
connection to the spiritual and the cultural while being a communicator in the present
and a gateway to rejuvenation and innovation in the future. Presently, communities are
acknowledging the importance of food to preserving their cultural identity and are
designing new projects to advance and create a more self-sufficient future. This chapter
will address how food is being used within projects of agency to guide communities
towards this future. To support these ideas, I will use Sherry Ortner’s concepts, which
include useful descriptions of agency and projects.
First, I would like to re draw attention towards Ortner’s description of agency. She
described it as a dual relationship between power and projects, resistance and
domination. Ortner calls the notion of agency double sided, on one hand defined as
intentionality and the pursuit of culturally defined projects. On the other, agency is
about power, asymmetry and social inequality. She describes these as intertwined,
sometimes bleeding together, or else retaining their distinct differences (Ortner
2006:139). This relationship between resistance and power are are inextricably linked.
The organizations focused on in this section will address both – the agency of power;
that of domination and resistance against the injustices done to these communities and
the soft agency of tradition, cultural and spirituality; agency that is defined by one’s
own values and ideals despite the injustice. The projects of agency reflect the
spirituality and cultural values of the Ojibwe, while the agency of power uses those
themes to guide their intentionality towards larger projects of resistance.
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Figure 10: Shades of Agency and Projects
63
This diagram illustrates this relationship. On the right is the dark, harder aspects of
agency, which I have also aligned with high intentionality. The diagram depicts a
number of shades from dark to light, ending with soft agency, which I have aligned with
low intentionality. While these projects have direction and set goals in mind, they are
achieved using deeply held values and inherent ideas. This is done to differentiate the
projects I will describe throughout this chapter and provide a visual representation of
the term shades of agency.
Food itself, as I have touched on before, cannot have agency in itself, yet the processes
related to food and the impact it has on aspects of society vital to regaining autonomy
are hugely significant. The projects of food, namely those of the food sovereignty
movement, address both of these fields of meaning. Some are on the light side of
agency, finding culturally appropriate means of attending to their goals, using qualities
and values deeply ingrained in Ojibwe culture. On the other hand, some are on the dark
side of agency, combatting the ills felt in the community through resistance and power
dynamics. Throughout this chapter, I will explore the organizations that all fall along
the spectrum of projects, from light to dark. I will use the concept of agentic projects
and illustrate using a number of non-profit organization efforts within the food
sovereignty movement. They each address different shades of agency and aspects of the
movement, including youth education, accessibility and rights, economic initiatives, and
cultural recovery.
During my time in the field, grassroots efforts and non-profit organizations stood out as
one of the most active participants in the Indigenous food sovereignty movement.
While some work within policy and law at the national and state levels, others focus on
educating young children, or economic independence. Many are aimed at both
revitalizing some aspect of Ojibwe culture and creating new paradigms within the
realms of food, environmental health and policy. Terms such as strengthening,
restoring, reviving, and participation are some of the common words used in the mission
statements of these organizations. While there are numerous organizations working
within this field, I will focus on two specific non-profits as exemplars of the work being
undertaken within the Indigenous food community: Dream of Wild Health (DOWH),
and the White Earth Land Recovery Project (WELRP). These use many different
shades of agency through their projects of food. I will be drawing attention to them for
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several reasons; first, I was able to spend a more significant amount of time getting to
know the workings of these organizations and made connections with their staff.
Second, their scale and outreach is large, allowing for a more diverse wealth of
knowledge and experience. Lastly, their approaches differ in their means – while
Dream of Wild Health focuses on spirituality and culturally appropriate means of
achieving their goals, White Earth Land Recovery Project focuses on structural change
and resistance. It is these differences that I will focus on, dividing this chapter first by
non-profit and then by theme for the sake of organization. I would like to point out that
the themes often “bleed together” reflecting Ortner’s description of agency, and are not
easily divisible or classifiable. While their approaches are quite different, together,
projects that address both the black and the white of agency work together to build a
strong framework for a future built on self-sufficiency and renewed cultural identity.
4.1 Dream of Wild Health: The Creation of a
Sacred Space
Figure 11: Group of Volunteers with Hope Flannigan and Diane Wilson (Right)
My first trip to Dream of Wild Health was several years ago on a fieldtrip during a class
at the University of Minnesota. We were brought into the fields and had a brief lecture
by Diane Wilson, the Executive Director of Dream of Wild Health. We spent the day
weeding and were all rewarded for our efforts with a delicious native taco lunch. Four
years later, I found myself on the farm again – this time on my own, as a volunteer.
Dream of Wild Health is a 10-acre organic farm in Hugo, Minnesota that began in 1998.
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This non-profit is unique in that it has no tribal affiliation and welcomes children to
their summer programs regardless of tribal membership. Their mission statement is to:
Restore health and well-being in the native community by recovering
knowledge of and access to health Indigenous foods, medicines and life
ways. We are committed to sharing our knowledge, resources and skills
with others in an effort to reduce poverty, improve health and nutrition,
and reconnect people and plants in a reciprocal relationship. We partner
with dozens of urban and tribal organizations on programs that work to
restore the mental, physical, and emotional health of our community. We
value the personal character traits of honesty, integrity, generosity,
humility, courage and fortitude. We value the belief and practice of
kinship and reciprocity in our relationships with all people and with the
natural world (Dream of Wild Health).
The fact that Dream of Wild Health has no tribal affiliation points to the non-profit’s
unique soft agentic approach. The mission statement backs this argument, promoting
ideas of recovering Indigenous lifeways, knowledge and reciprocity. Valuing positive
character traits and kinship between all people and the natural world denotes the
significance of cultural beliefs within the non-profit.
I spent several afternoons volunteering on the farm and quickly noticed the relaxed
atmosphere and the care taken to make people feel that they had a stake in the land and
the development of the farm. I was often asked to go out into the field and pull weeds
with other volunteers, making conversation about how they found the farm and why
they chose to volunteer there. Many mentioned the feeling they got while on the farm –
a relaxed and deeply connected feeling they could not get anywhere else in their lives.
The Dream of Wild Health webpage calls the farm “a safe and sacred place” and while I
stood in the middle of a row of rainbow chard soaking in the July sun, I could see why.
In this section, I will examine what I refer to as the triangle of positive action, which
provides culturally appropriate solutions to the losses seen in chapter two.
4.1.1 Seed Savers and Seed Keepers
The first means of achieving Dream of Wild Health’s mission is seed saving. Seed
saving is an ancient practice of harvesting, drying and storing seeds for the following
year. I begin with this because it is at the root of the food sovereignty efforts. In
response to the impacts of privatizing seeds which I discussed in chapter two, activists,
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organizations, and concerned citizens, have started to boycott hybrid varieties of
vegetables and fruits, plant native varieties, and save the seeds to be used again the
following year. This idea of saving seeds is by no means new to the Indigenous
peoples of North America. Seeds hold in them knowledge that was handed down
through the totemic system and are important as they are said to be given to the Native
people by the creator. Seed saving reflects the important spiritual connection Indigenous
communities have to their ancestors and other beings. Seeds reflect the cyclical
connectivity between generations as mentioned by Rowen White in the publication
“Food is Medicine.”
From the traditional perspective, these seeds encompass more than just
characteristics. They are sacred heirlooms, which are ‘witnesses to the
past.’ These seeds hold cultural value and cultural memory that is a vital
part of traditional culture and history (White qtd. LaDuke and Alexander).
His statement that seeds are witness to the past points to the importance of the past in
the development of the future. They are a necessary and respected aspect of renewing
Indigenous food systems.
The Dream of Wild Health program began in March of 2000 when a letter arrived from
Cora Baker, a Potawatomi elder and Keeper of the Seeds. In the letter, she explained
that she had gardened for many years, hanging her corn to dry on the side of the barn.
People passing by on the road saw her garden and began giving her their seeds to save.
Five months before she passed on, Cora wrote:
I had prayed and prayed that someone would take this gardening up again.
I am very pleased to learn about your project. I feel that the Great Creator
has answered my humble prayers. With the help of my great granddaughter
and grandson, we set out to help you. I wish that someday the children will
come to realize the importance of the garden (Dream of Wild Health).
Cora and her great-granddaughter sent many different varieties of corn, beans, and
squash, plus several sunflower varieties, indigenous tobacco, and different plant
medicines to Dream of Wild Health. Eventually, word caught on about the initiative and
seeds began to be sent from across the country. “Some came knotted up in a
handkerchief, with a note saying, ‘My grandmother wanted you to have these.’ Another
family donated Cherokee seeds that were carried on the original Trail of Tears.” Today,
the farm has a collection of some 300 varieties of seeds. Each year, the University of
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Minnesota helps keep the seed viable by growing out different varieties (Dream of Wild
Health). Seed saving is in this case, a connection to the elders and to the past. To Cora
Baker, it was a spiritual mission to have someone care for her garden and continue on
her tradition.
The seed saving program at Dream of Wild Health reflects respect and reciprocity,
which are underlying themes of the non-profit. The efforts of this project are not
undertaken for larger political goals, but to ensure that the fabric of seeds and the
knowledge they hold remains intact. The seeds are propagated; their fruits are grown
and enjoyed by the youngest generation, instilling in them the emotional connection
they had to the elders. This leads to the argument that this project is undertaken as a
softer project of agency, with spiritual, cultural and emotional goals in mind.
4.1.2 Knowledge Sharing and Youth Education: The Making of a
“Garden Warrior”
This connection of elders to youth leads to the next project of food. One of the most
sacred and important aspects of Ojibwe life is the sharing of knowledge between elders
and youth. Historically, Ojibwe education addressed both the practical skills necessary
for everyday life, and the life skills thought to enhance the soul. These two aspects
formed a balance to aid the development of the path of life (Johnston 1976). Youth
were taught through observation, fables, oral tradition, songs, prayers, games, and
dances performed by other members of the tribe. Although much of this educational
culture was lost with the introduction of boarding schools, many new Native schools
and youth education projects have been erected to reintroduce youth to their cultural
roots. Dream of Wild Health has taken an active role in reintroducing Native youth,
particularly those from the inner-city, to those roots. They aim to address the problems
of cultural disengagement through a series of programs aimed at all age groups.
Cora’s Kids is a week-long program designed for children age’s eight to twelve and
their parents to learn about growing food, cooking, health, and culture. The summer
program again health, organic food growing and cooking, and also money management
and weekly work at a local farmer’s market. The Youth Leaders Program was created
for older students who excel in school, and show responsibility and maturity. The year-
round program encourages students to participate in the food sovereignty and food
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justice movements in the broader community. Dream of Wild Health also serves the
entire family through the Mino-wiisinidaa (we all eat well) program. The six week long
course teaches families basic food safety and preparation. There are sessions on
gathering, Native cooking techniques, and nutrition (Garden Warriors Good Seeds
2015). Each of these programs allows children to learn and grow while deepening their
connection to their Indigenous roots. The age ranges overlap to allow children to attend
all the programs consecutively. The Garden Warrior Program is geared towards
children ages 13-18 and provides them with a stipend and chance to exercise the skills
necessary for adult life. The kids are required to leave behind all of their electronics
when arriving at the farm. They are not allowed to eat any junk food either. Executive
director Diane Wilson was quoted on the Garden Warriors Good Seeds webpage
saying,
We want them hearing the birds, we want them observing what is around
them and you can’t do that if you are disconnected from your
surroundings. Out here we have really gifted teachers, but the most
profound teacher of all is the land and the plants (Garden Warriors Good
Seeds 2015).
During my time at the farm, I attended a celebration of the Garden Warrior Program
graduates. It was a gathering of 40 or so people, including the DOWH staff, volunteers,
and family members of the graduates. There were several tents put up for the feast,
picnic tables scattered around the front lawn, an intricately hand-painted tepee, and
traditional music playing. Bald Eagles and Vultures circled the scene, catching the
warm summer drafts. Many stood watching them, respectfully talking and
acknowledging them as a good omen. It did seem to be a sign in such a meaningful
gathering – Bald Eagles are the National bird of the United States and a totem member
of the Baswenaazzhi group charged with the task of communication (Warren 1984). In
many Native American tribes, Eagles are seen as powerful leaders, or messengers
between the creator and humans (Native Languages). After a short prayer led by Ernie,
it was time to eat. The elders led the way through a line of delicious dishes, all
homemade from farm-grown produce. Fresh summer squash casseroles and traditional
Minnesotan hot dishes, wild rice, buns, fresh fish from a northern Minnesotan lake, and
bison from the plains to the west. After the feast, Ernie began the graduation ceremony:
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It’s amazing to see these young people transform in such a short time. I’ve
been here for a few years but I’ve learned so much from them - they have a
lot to offer me so I’m not only teaching them but they’re teaching me.
They’re our future leaders they are the ones that are going to be
responsible and we are very fortunate we have a fine group of future
leaders and I have no hesitation they will take command. The term Garden
Warrior is a strong one. I come from a warrior clam –I was introduced into
the Kit-Fox warrior society of my tribe the Northern Arapaho and I was
probably the last group to be introduced into the warrior society. I have
taught the kids that a warrior is not a person that fights; that is the last thing
that you do. You have to be kind you have to be compassionate, you have
to be caring, you protect your people and you have to be honest. That’s a
lot to be responsible for – so to be a garden warrior has a lot of
responsibility to it” (Whiteman: Speech 20.7.2014).
After Ernie was finished, he introduced each of the ten or so students, most of whom
were around 15 years of age, who shook hands with the staff. Some said a few words of
thanks. One noted how much he had changed in his time on the farm. “I learned about
the plants and the insects and when I first went here I was so stuck up I didn’t know
what to do but yeah I got to meet new people and have the big feast and I’m really
honored to be here” (Garden Warrior: Speech 24.7. 2014). Another said,
I really enjoyed this program because it’s really welcoming and I got to
learn about my culture and I got to learn about food and how to cook. I
enjoyed the staff and everyone here and I’m going to be coming back next
year (Garden Warrior: Speech 24.7.2014).
The term Garden Warrior seems like a simple gesture – an innocent expression of an
ancient tradition, yet the term holds much more than that. It seemed that Ernie was in
fact voicing that it is up to the youth to fight for what is right, to uphold cultural
customs and be a positive force for good through food. Others write about youth
warriors and the role they play in Indigenous communities:
There are a number of young Indians taking a pledge to fight. To fight for
themselves, to fight to be better Indians. Fighting in the sense that they will
beat off the negative things; child violence, violence against women, drug
abuse, corruption, low esteem, neglect. The people will vow to become
good people... It's about not backing down. That is a very hard thing to do.
To look at things and do what is right. To speak up for those that cannot.
To be proud of being an Indian. To be able to work for your people. Above
all to be kind. To be kind to yourself... Kindness is the toughest thing you
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can face. In order to be kind you have to be strong. How many of us can
have the courage to stand up for the poor, the hurt, the weak, the abused,
the neglected, the persecuted? It is a difficult thing. A warrior must do this.
She and he will speak up if things are not right (Jullian 2010).
This expression of strength through kindness is an example of Indigenous notions of
power and the yearning to create spaces that are shaped not by negativity and past
neglect, but of positive forces for community growth and well-being. Directing
statements like this at youth is a means of forging a constructive future through
instilling notions from the past.
I asked Frank Haney if the programs seemed to influence kids and if he’d seen changes
in them from the time they began the program until the time they left.
It’s small, but from what I’ve observed in the last few years, it’s probably
one of the most effective that I’ve ever witnessed. Being able to watch kids
come here every year and be able to see them be affected by what happens
while they’re here is pretty impressive. Yeah, in the winter time, our
nutritionist teaches the parents and connects the child and the caregiver of
the child to the same focal point. I think it’s really effective. Learning
about nutrition and health is one thing, but practicing it is another. The kids
– you know I was saying being connected to culture is important; getting
out of the city getting in the sun, getting into the dirt, that’s really
important (Haney: interview 20.07.14).
Meeting the students and their families’ was a meaningful experience for me. Many
were from Minneapolis and hadn’t spent much time in the country before the program.
It was clear that the students were proud of what they had achieved. I watched as they
led their parents and grandparents by the arm to look that the gardens they had helped
plant and tend. Some picked produce off plants as they went, offering it to their loved-
ones with expectant looks. The kids showed tremendous enthusiasm for their project
and their achievements on the farm. This is another face of the soft-agentic side of
projects. In a culture that puts so much emphasis on youth and learning, educational
projects such as these could be the beginnings of new a generational trend.
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4.1.3 Distributing the Dream
As mentioned previously, access to healthy and culturally appropriate food is a key
aspect of food sovereignty. Dream of Wild Health is undertaking several projects to
combat this. Along with the youth education projects, and the seed saving program, the
Indigenous Food Share provides both a connection to the land and healthy organic food
to families in the area. The program is modeled after the Community Supported
Agriculture idea, in which members pay up-front for a share of the farm’s produce.
Each week, boxes are delivered to members at a drop site. Programs such as these are
becoming increasingly popular in the US, creating more localized food systems that are
less dependent on large scale globalized production. (Local Harvest).
The Indigenous Food Share program states this as its goal on the DOWH webpage:
Our weekly boxes will include 5-10 varieties of vegetables, fruits, and
herbs, and fresh eggs are also available to add to a share. The produce
follows the seasons, and may also include honey, our Indigenous dried
beans, wild rice, and other Indigenous gathered or produced foods. Every
week we’ll include a newsletter from the farm, a recipe using the week’s
ingredients, and other info. There will also be opportunities for members to
come out to the farm and pick their own produce, but the weekly boxes
will be based on what is in season at the farm. A full share is $500, which
comes out to about $20/week, and it is a lot of good food! You'll have
plenty to share with relatives, freeze or can for the winter, or split between
two or three families. We also offer half-shares for smaller families. The
big thing is: we want to make our good food accessible to all, regardless of
income. If you think cost would be a burden for your family, please contact
us. The important thing is you'll get your veggies.
According to Haney, this program is gaining success every season and provides the
farm with the funds needed to keep up with demand. The food share addresses several
significant barriers, including access to land to grow one’s own produce, which many in
the city lack, educational information on how to cook and store the vegetables and
fruits, and offers financial support and other options to families who cannot pay the
deposit (Haney interview). The program offers significant environmental benefits as
well. Growing native varieties of fruits and vegetables ensures more biodiversity in the
local agricultural system. In addition, families are given the opportunity to buy local
organic produce directly from the farm, decreasing the carbon footprint of the food.
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This program addresses issues of access to healthy food within Native American
communities. As stated throughout this paper, I have shown that this lost connection
between culturally appropriate foods has been one of the most significant harms to
Indigenous societies. This project contains another angle of culturally appropriate
means of healing the ills faced by Ojibwe communities. The fact that the Indigenous
food share program is inclusive and disregards tribal affiliation makes it clear that the
aim is to create an inclusive space for everyone hoping to reconnect to native foods.
Dream of Wild Health has been successful at distributing the dream of a sacred place.
They have created a group of motivated and educated young warriors, who will fight to
spread the messages of kindness, respect, and responsibility. Dream of Wild Health has
undertaken projects aimed at strengthening community engagement and respect. Their
methodical acknowledgement of youth, culture and tradition and environmental
stewardship creates a holistic solution to the serious issues faced in Indigenous
communities. These programs do not incur the hard forms of agency, in which injustices
are fought playing the game of the antagonists. The projects are not aimed at high level
policy change or resistance to the status quo. Instead, they are born from the earth and a
relationship to the elders. They can be thought of as the soft projects of agency, aimed
at addressing issues through culturally appropriate and inclusive means of positive
action.
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4.2 White Earth Land Recovery Project: The
Creation of a Political Space
Figure 12: White Earth Land Recovery Project office
I first visited the White Earth Land Recovery Project (WELRP) for the foodshed
mapping last August. Located in an old converted school, the office stood out amongst
the modest houses and few shops along the main street. The building was covered in
large colorful murals depicting their founder, Winona LaDuke and other indigenous
community members with backdrops of animals, plants, patterns, and beautiful
landscapes. It was quite quiet and seemed deserted aside from a small boy, who asked
me my name and told me he was 6 years old before insisting on showing me around the
building. I was glad at my luck of finding such a willing guide. He pointed at different
doors and explained what happened inside. “That’s the radio station so we should be
quite. That’s where all the posters and pictures are, and that’s the classroom.”
Eventually, we bumped into Bob Shimek, who I had spoken with at the Toxic Tater’s
meeting and who had invited me to the foodshed mapping, which would take place later
that day. He led me to the school’s gymnasium, which had been converted into their
production and distribution center. It held rows of shelving units filled with
merchandise including Native Harvest soups, jams and preserves, handmade birch bark
crafts, books on indigenous food sovereignty and the Ojibwe language, wild rice and
maple syrup. He led me outside to show me their wind turbine and their new brick oven
for baking breads. I was impressed by the operation, if not a little surprised at the
informality of it. Old yard chairs littered the backyard along with an old Mercedes,
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which Bob referred to as “the lawn ornament”. The project carries with it a certain
weight in Minnesota – many have heard of the organization and respect it as one of the
most successful in the Indigenous food sovereignty movement.
White Earth Land Recovery Project is a multi-issue non-profit organization, which was
founded in 1989. Based on the White Earth Indian Reservation in northwestern
Minnesota, their interest is in structural change, and in restoring spiritual, economic,
and cultural wealth. The projects undertaken by WELRP reflect stronger shades of
agency, focusing less on the spiritual and more on structural resistance. Their mission
statement is as follows:
Our approach to systemic change is honed with almost two decades of
experience, and today we’re one of the largest reservation-based non-
profit organizations in the United States. We emerged from a land rights
struggle–a pitched battle in our community for many generations. WELRP
facilitates the recovery of the original land base of the White Earth Indian
Reservation while preserving and restoring traditional practices of sound
land stewardship, language fluency, community development, and
strengthening our spiritual and cultural heritage. Our programs are
structured in such a way as to strengthen community leadership and build
citizen participation involving environmental and cultural justice and
preservation work, restoration of sustainable communities, renewable
energy, media, and youth and leadership development programs (WELRP
2012).
The language used in this statement reflects this yearning to change norms using
political rhetoric. Words like strengthening, participation, development, and recovery
are strong, commanding a certain amount of force.
The founder of the project and former director, Winona LaDuke, was born in California
in 1959. She attended Harvard University where she received a degree in rural
economic development. After graduating, LaDuke moved to the White Earth
reservation where she helped fight a legal battle to regain Native land. LaDuke also ran
for vice president with Ralph Nader in 1996 (Voices from the Gaps 2009). Her
background in economics and political science benefitted the organization and
influenced the goals and missions of WELRP through firsthand experience with the US
government and the philosophies communicated in large academic institutions. This
greatly shaped the organization of WELRP and the scope of the projects, giving her an
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in with key players in academia, industry, and politics. The history of this project
supports the broader approach used to combat the issues on the reservation. Like Dream
of Wild Health, WELRP employs a suite of programs to address the problems. I will
organize their efforts based on themes expressed in the mission statement. First,
environmental stewardship and justice, which I argue is the softest shade of WELRP’s
agentic projects and overlaps with those of Dream of Wild Health. Second, cultural
preservation followed by economic resilience and lastly, land preservation. While these
projects resemble harder shades of agency, it is important to note that agency is by no
means a static structure. While the political undertones suggest resistance, it is also
clear that the main goals of the projects are driven by deep spiritual and cultural themes,
much like those of Dream of Wild Health, which align with the softer shades of agency.
WELRP’s approach is pragmatic, encompassing the economic feasibility as well as the
cultural benefits of their projects. They work both to break down current paradigms and
rebuild their own in a complex battle between the past, present and future.
4.2.1 Environmental Stewardship and Access: The Seed
Libraries
To begin, it seems appropriate to reflect the fact that the projects of agency are not black
and white, but occur as shades. In the first case of the seed libraries, it is clear that this
effort has much in common with the sacred nature of Dream of Wild Health. The seed
libraries represent the importance of cultural heritage and the spiritual significance of
seed and relations. This being said, it is still clear that there are wider structural goals of
community participation, increased access and self-sufficiency imbedded in the project.
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While I was visiting the White Earth Reservation, I stayed in a tent on WELRP’s small
farm in Ponsford, which was then occupied by Zach Paige, a graduate of the Native
Seed SEARCH Seed School and intern through the Americorp VISTA program. Zach
was kind enough to be my guide throughout my time on White Earth. Although not
Native himself, Zach spent several years in the community and seemed very at ease and
well-respected in the community. He was an active participant in the Foodshed
Mapping, offering many observations and much valuable knowledge about seeds and
his connections to farmers around the area. After the foodshed mapping, Zach gave me,
along with two other researchers from Brown University, a tour of the Callaway White
Earth Seed Library, housed in a large classroom in the WELRP office. It consisted of a
refrigerator and old cooktop, and tables holding glass jars full of different seeds. There
were hand drawn signs by children that read things like, “come and get some seeds for
your garden”. According to WELRP’s annual report for 2013, the seed library had
collected over 100 varieties of seeds over the season. Ears of beautiful corn lay on the
tables and Zach took care to show us the beautiful pink and white iridescence of the
Pink Lady variety. His passion for seeds was obvious as he showed us the small
envelopes filled with different varieties, sporting colors such as deep blue, shiny black,
and speckled red orange. Zach’s biggest passion appeared to be corn. The Seed Bank
holds many different native varieties with names like Bear Island Flint, Saskatchewan
White Flint, Seneca Blue Bear Dance, and Dakota Black Popcorn. The varieties differ
in color and size, some stout and bright white, others black as night. It was easy to see
the allure of such diverse varieties of the same plant.
The Callaway White Earth Seed Library is one branch of three seed libraries on the
reservation including the Mahnomen Seed Library based out of the White Earth Tribal
College, and the Naytahwaush Seed Library based out of the Naytahwaush Charter
School. These three libraries are part of a larger project known as the Great Lakes
Indigenous Restoration Network. According to the Anishanaabe Seed Project webpage,
the goal of the project is to:
Promote restoration of Indigenous cultural and agricultural knowledge in
this region. Finding local food growers on the reservation to make the
Anishinaabe Seed Library strong. This will also strengthen our farm to
school program. Develop an active, participatory network among the
existing groups (tribal colleges, land grant universities, tribal and non-
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tribal growers and seed banks/networks) to enhance community seed
libraries and banking. Document climate change related adaptation and
viability of various traditional agricultural crops, and seek to further
adapt, as needed our varieties. Document nutritional value of various
varieties to allow for tribal communities and tribal nutritionists to better
choose possible foods for undernourished and at risk community members
(Indigenous Seed Library 2013).
Terms such as increasing viability and adaptability, creating a participatory network,
and helping the undernourished and at risk community members, communicate the fact
that this program is aimed at the harder forms of agency. For the White Earth Land
Recovery Project, saving seeds is not necessarily done for spiritual or traditional
reasons; there seems to be more focus on the use of seed saving for larger structural and
political motives. In addition, there is an economic motivation: “Saving seeds from our
region allows us to develop seeds suited to our soil type and growing season; we also
significantly reduce our organization’s food costs through this practice” (WELRP
Annual Report 2013). The seed libraries address the problems of access, climate
change, lack of self-sufficiency and poor nutrition while strengthening a participatory
network of people working towards the same goals. This notes a clear marked
difference in the projects undertaken by Dream of Wild Health and the White Earth
Land Recovery Project.
4.2.2 Economic Resiliency: Native Harvest
The White Earth Land Recovery Project also has more concrete goals of reinvigorating
the local economy. White Earth Nation is the largest reservation in the State with
19,000 enrolled members. It also has one of the highest rates of unemployment in the
state of Minnesota (25%) while those living below the poverty line of 23,230 is over
50% according to the US census (Indian Affairs). With these disparities in mind, it is
clear why the group has made it their mission to address them.
The gymnasium full of products is evidence of White Earth’s project Native Harvest,
which works to protect and revive native crops while addressing the economic issues on
the reservation. They sell an assortment of products ranging from jams, fruit spreads,
soup mixes, hominy corn and maple syrup, to hair accessories, gift baskets and bulk
wild rice to local shops and cooperatives across the state. I have on several occasions
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seen the branded photo of the Native woman on packages of soups and mixes in my
local coop. In 2011, the Project sold 150,000 dollars’ worth of goods, and expected that
number to rise to 250,000 in 2012 (WELRP Annual Report 2013). Their webpage gives
a detailed description of the project, calling it “a means of resisting the global,
industrialized food system that can corrupt our health, freedom, and culture through
inappropriate food production and genetic engineering” (WELRP 2012).
Native Harvest has also acquired a building from the Midwest Minnesota Community
Development Corporation, and received help re-modeling the kitchen into a state of the
art commercial kitchen. The new building provides a space for community gatherings,
workshops, and meetings. Florence Goodman, the Native Harvest Food Production
Coordinator was quoted on the Native Harvest webpage noting how the new kitchen has
impacted production:
Our new kitchen equipment has made it easier to roast our hominy, can our
jellies and jams, and package all of the foods we sell. This facility will
allow us to take our production to the next level, and hopefully create more
jobs for the community. Already this spring, the area was put to good use
holding community gardening and permaculture workshops, as well as art
projects for youth” (Native Harvest).
This project is still in the making, but through the creation of new jobs, and infusion of
150,000 dollars into the local economy in 2011, Native Harvest is off to a strong start. It
seems that this is a productive effort giving the community a chance to see the
economic value of efforts to sustain and produce traditional foods. This has elements of
both the softer more spiritual shades of agency, in that they are preserving the art of
processing their native foods, and also the structural harder shades of agency in that
they securing their economic future.
4.2.3 Cultural Preservation: Indigenous Farm to School
Program
The third aspect of WELRP’s efforts comes in the form of cultural preservation. While
many efforts being undertaken within this realm occur in the form of softer agentic
projects, I will focus on the Indigenous Farm to School program, which I argue is harder
in nature. It emphasizes the importance of food and youth in conserving tradition,
which addressing the issue of self-sufficiency in school food programs. The significance
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of starting a program such as this on a Reservation is that nutritional programs and
school lunches are traditionally provided by the USDA. According to the WELRP’s
farm to cafeteria initiative, the US Federal Government has played a large role in the
food consumed in schools.
…about half of all tribal communities in the United States currently
participate in the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations
(FDPIR). FDPIR is more commonly called the commodity food program.
Tribal members use commodities to supplement their diets. FDPIR is an
alternative to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
Many native households opt to use FDPIR due to the fact that SNAP
offices are usually far from reservations (Dwyer 2010).
The commodity foods provided by such programs have often been critiqued for lacking
sufficient nutrients and being high in calories. In addition, the definition of ‘healthy
food’ was determined by the US non-native government, which has traditionally
excluded native foods. FDPIR boxes typically contained surplus agricultural products
such as canned meats, canned fish, canned vegetables, canned fruit, dried beans,
powdered milk, butter, corn syrup, sugar, shortening, sweetened juices, egg mix, and
crackers, in addition to simple carbohydrates and starch (Dwyer 2010:15). The removal
of traditional foods from the every-day diet of American Indians broke many ties to the
past – the names of months no longer had serious significance, the oral traditions and
superstitions lost meaning, and generations were no longer bound by a vital connection
to the land. The loss of this generational bridge culturally and nutritionally is being
addressed through the Indigenous Farm to School Program.
The Indigenous Farm to School Program reintroduces children to native whole foods
grown within the community while decreasing dependence on the US federal
government. The program is modeled after the National Farm to School Program,
which is a hub for information, advocacy and networking to bring local foods and food
education to schools and preschools across the US. Currently, the network includes
over 40,000 schools and serves more than 23 million students (Farm to School Network
2015).
In 2008, the Farm to School Program was initiated in the Pine Point Elementary School
and grew to include the Naytahwaush Charter School and the Circle of Life Academy.
The program works with 50 different farmers and producers to provide over 60 different
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varieties of foods including bison. They now serve over 100 students, elders, and school
staff local produced grown by local farmers. Throughout 2013 farmers and the program
provided three local elementary schools (Pine Point School, Naytahwaush Community
Charter School, and Circle of Life Academy) with over 2,000 pounds of fresh, local
food. WELRP also found that students are more likely to try new foods and like them
when they have the opportunity to learn about local food varieties (WELRP Annual
Report 2013). The projects impacts health and nutrition through providing fresh fruits,
vegetables and meats to schools, economic resiliency by providing farmers with a
market for a diversity of fruits and vegetables, self-sufficiency by decreasing
dependence on FDPIR, and cultural preservation by renewing the connections between
children and their food.
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4.2.4 Land Preservation
White Earth Land Recovery Project in many cases, uses the tools of the American
government to combat and resist the disparities faced on the reservation. Their name
alone points to the concrete aim of recovering land within the reservation. As described
earlier, the American government strategically dismembered groups from their original
land base and sold it to white farmers, forcing them onto smaller plots of land, without
property rights. Currently, only ten percent of White Earth Reservation is held by
Natives (Onaway Trust). According to Truer,
The land in side reservations such as Leech Lake and White Earth
resembles a checkerboard: the reservation boundary is the edge of the
board, and within it there are squares of different colors – black for tribally
owned land, white for non-tribal land owned by private individuals,
counties, states, the federal government, and corporations (Truer
2012:149).
Currently, 10% of the land within the reservation is owned by the tribe (compared to
6% in 1978). This in comparison to the federal government which owns 15%, the state
of Minnesota, which owns 7%, counties with 17%, while private ownership is 51%
(Indian Affairs Council 2012).
The White Earth Land Recovery Project is currently working on regaining Ojibwe lands
through purchasing land back from non-Indian land owners and through donations from
those who are moving off their reservation properties. According to the Indian Affairs
Council, The White Earth land Settlement Act (WELSA) of 1986 required the transfer
of 10,000 acres of state/county held land to the Tribe. The Tribe would be allowed
cleared titles of 100,000 acres of privately owned land to trust status (Indian Affairs
Council 2012). Winona La Duke explains:
In this way, acre by acre, we will restore our land base, protect our
ancestor's graves and create a wider sustainable, traditional harvest-based
economic foundation for members of our community. White Earth Land
Recovery Project continues in the spirit of this movement, seeking to
recover the original land base of the Reservation for collective, sustainable
agricultural purposes. (Onaway Trust).
Through repurchasing the land lost to non-Native owners, White Earth is gaining power
in the eyes of the government. Owning property is an important resource, displaying
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power and economic stability to the state of Minnesota and federal government. For the
Ojibwe, it means regaining control over their own resource base for the first time since
the signing of the treaties.
It is clear based on the language used and the projects being undertaken by the White
Earth Land Recovery Project that their goals are aimed at pragmatism, resistance and
empowerment. The dichotomy between the soft shades of agency focused on reviving
and encouraging the traditions of the community while communicating harder agentic
ideals of resisting industrialized and liberalized forms of production, sets White Earth
Land Recovery Project apart from Dream of Wild Health. Documenting climate change,
creating a more self-reliant school nutrition program, increasing viability of native seeds
and documenting nutrition for at risk community members all aim to address serious
political issues at their root. Their terms and means of addressing problems is direct and
structured, using phrases common in political campaigns and agendas. This points to a
yearning to use the agentic power used by the US government for their own means.
4.3 Their Collective Agency
While these two non-profits are based some 200 miles apart and have different methods
of achieving change, both derive meaning and motivation from core values; to revitalize
their unique culture, keep their traditional foods alive, and create self-sufficient futures
for their communities. The projects address environmental and social justice through
access to healthy foods and land, economic resiliency through the inclusion of
community members such as farmers in their missions, and cultural preservation
through communicating the themes of respect and reciprocity. Yet the contrast between
the types of projects and exercise of agency in these two non-profits is noteworthy.
Dream of Wild Health aims to address the sacred and to create a space that cultivates
respect and inclusion through lighter and softer forms of agency. The seeds they save
bring people from across the country together around the idea of saving their relatives.
They instill kindness and reciprocity in youth, and create a unique inclusive
environment that encourages cooking, listening, and growing. White Earth Land
Recovery Project protects and guards against the ills of the past using legal and political
tools to voice a strong message of resistance and subversion through culturally
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appropriate and peaceful means. They work to address nutrition and health,
accessibility, justice, climate, and rights through their suite of programs.
The types of agency employed by the groups seem equally successful, both engaging
the community and working to progress the Native agenda within the broader society.
They use their norms and practices to create spaces aimed at change. This is an
encouraging sign, particularly when recognizing that this is by no means the extent of
the efforts being undertaken within the Indigenous food sovereignty movement in
Minnesota.
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5 Envisioning New Horizons
Thus far, I have explored the reasoning behind the questions, why food and how food,
beginning with historical and spiritual beginnings and moving through past injustices
into the present day – a present riddled with healing scars and new visions for the
future. In the previous chapter, I provided some optimism; giving in depth examples of
the systematic ways Ojibwe communities are using agentic projects to address their
scars. The projects assume different forms of agency, some addressing structural
change, others cultural revitalization and education. These projects, hard or soft, highly
intentional or not, work together to form a web, re-strengthening the connections that
were lost and building the foundation for a more resilient future. In this chapter, I will
bring these projects a step further, addressing important larger themes and potential
impacts of these projects.
This chapter will address overarching ideas such as the visibility of the state, the
significance of places in the creation of spaces for change, and participation. The
existence of the state and the actions it has taken, define and create the structure and
space for resistance and empowerment in Native communities. As Ortner has argued
oppositional forms of agency cannot exist without a power of dominating force to resist
against. It is this that obliges me to address these structures. This explains the
intentionality and mission of the grassroots efforts I have described throughout this
work; the dominating force that has forever been so present in Ojibwe communities is
now being resisted. The American Indian community’s newfound self- actualization
over the past century gives rise to a new relationship between the state and Native
Americans.
I will expand to include other cases that illustrate these themes. Here, the relationship
between the Ojibwe food sovereignty movement and the progress communities are
making to become centers of engagement, participation, and self-determination will
become clear. This chapter will take grounded examples of the agentic projects and
explain them using more overarching theoretical terms. I will begin with the broadest
and most overarching theme of the state, and move into the concepts of place and the
creation of space, finishing with new paradigms in participation.
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5.1 Resisting the System
Within the context of the US, the state is a complex structure that is important to
understand before moving on. The state can be thought of at three distinct levels; the
federal US federal government, the state government of Minnesota, and lastly the local,
in this case, tribal government. In addition, we must acknowledge that reservations are
sovereign self-governing bodies, with independent legal systems. Despite this self-rule,
the US federal governments and Minnesota state government are easily visible within
the reservations. In order to contextualize Ojibwe resistance efforts, the states’, a term I
will use to address both the federal and Minnesotan governments, structures must be
addressed. Understanding the state is useful in order to give context to the history of
marginalization. I will be focusing directly on the impacts of federal and state
governments before providing examples of how Ojibwe communities are progressing to
new paradigms of place and space, as well as participatory governance.
Theorists such as Das and Poole acknowledge that anthropology views the state as a
rationalized administrative form of political organization visible through bureaucratic
and hierarchical institutions (Das and Poole 2004: 4). While reservations are sovereign
entities with their own governing bodies, the federal government defined this way, is
visible in native communities. The federal state is and has been an ever-present force in
Native communities since the early 19th
century during the formation of treaties when
the US government established their ability to regulate relations with the tribes
(Barreiro and Johnson 2005). The state’s observable manifestations come in different
forms, both seemingly benevolent and more aggressive. Examples of the states
visibility are the school food program, the low-income tract housing on the reservations
and in the conflicts between tribes and the Department of Natural Resources.
The first example appears to be benign. US federal government policies had large
impacts on American Indians. During the 1960s, the Civil Rights Movement and the
War on Poverty began to be felt in Native communities. New community programs
began to spring up in the hopes of developing tribal infrastructure to bring services to
community members through tribal governments. One of the first projects was the US
Department of Housing’s (HUD) Tract housing development. All across the country,
the government began to build suburb-style developments on reservations. David
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Treuer, a former resident of Red Lake Reservation and author of “Rez Life,” writes
about the housing.
These neighborhoods mainly consisted of split-level, or rambler-style
suburban homes, arranged by either square grid or meandering culs-de-sac.
It was believed that the suburban bioscape was the most conducive to
success and happiness. Where once there had been fallow fields or deep
wood there were, suddenly, clusters of houses set cheek to jowl, with
paved streets and gutters, but no curbs. …On large reservations such as
Leech Lake and White Earth that had many small villages located within
their boundaries, the age-old structure of these communities – the
geographical manifestation of family ties, old rivalries, kinship, and
warring factions – was completely ignored. (Treuer 2012:169).
The state, in this context, had both a significant negative and positive impacts on tribal
life. The creation of low-income housing for those who had previously occupied
dwellings without running water or electricity could in many ways be seen as a
benevolent and beneficial act. Yet this creation of built space by the US government
impacted the structure of native communities, disrupting cultural norms and creating
new physical and cultural barriers. With built spaces that reflected modern westernized
ideas of suburban life and not Tribal notions of community, confrontation and
resentment has become more prominent. As we have seen earlier, state initiatives such
as the commodity food program provided sustenance to tribes, but at the same time
made them dependent on culturally inappropriate foods that caused many of the health
disparities being dealt with today. This provides a case of a seemingly benign action
seriously eroding the cultural fabric of Indigenous communities. While these examples
occur within the communities themselves, the state has been felt within the land and
waters as well. Significant conflicts have arisen over the years in response to resource
management and state policies.
In conflicts such as these, the state manifests itself through the judicial system. In 1934,
the Indian New Deal was born, in the form of the Indian Reorganization Act (IRA),
otherwise known as the Wheeler-Howard Act. This legislation ushered in a new era of
tribal constitutions and Native self-governing and rule. (Taylor qtd. in Weeks 2002).
These newly regained rights and voice within the US government led to an era of
empowerment within the American Indian community. The American Indian
Movement, or AIM, began to receive media coverage in the 1960s, after their efforts to
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draw attention to the treatment of Native Americans by the US government. As a result,
new policies began to spring up around the idea of Indian “self- determination.” In
Minnesota, these new policies encouraged political and economic power among tribal
governments, who began to assert their influence to regain their treaty rights to hunt,
fish, trap and gather on their lands; a promise previously made by the US Government.
In many cases, their efforts were strongly opposed by sportsmen across the state, the
State-run Department of Natural Resources, who claimed it was illegal for Natives to
hunt or fish without a state issued permit, and the federal government. Truer describes
one such example.
In the winter of 1974 the Tribble brothers, members of Lac Courte Oreilles
Ojibwe reservation in northern Wisconsin, stepped off the reservation
where it cut through the middle of Chief Lake. They cut a hole in the ice
and began spearing fish. They had informed the Wisconsin Department of
Natural Resources (WDNR) of their intention to spear fish before the left,
and the WNDR was there to greet them. The Tribbles were arrested, as
many Ojibwe had been arrested for game and fish violations in the past and
as other Indian activists in Washington state and Michigan were as well: to
deliberately create a test case for their rights. They had sued the head of the
WDNR, Lester Voight. They claimed that the treaty rights secured by
Chief Buffalo had never been extinguished. The right to hunt and fish by
whatever means necessary wherever necessary was a property right
secured by their ancestors and they were the heirs to it. In 1978. Judge
Doyle of the Federal District Court ruled against the Ojibwe of Wisconsin.
White protesters formed the action committees Stop Treaty Abuse
Wisconsin (STAW) and Protect America’s Rights and Resources (PARR),
and they networked to prevent Indians from exercising their treaty rights…
Doyle’s ruling was appealed in 1983 and the 7th
District US Court of
Appeals overturned it. The appeals court ruled clearly and decisively that
when the Ojibwe in Wisconsin signed the treaties with the federal
government they in no way relinquished their off-reservation hunting,
fishing, and gathering rights… In 1990, the Mille Lacs Band…made a
similar claim for their own treaty rights and sued the state of Minnesota…
The Supreme Court chose to hear the Mille Lacs case and ruled five to four
in favor of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe (Truer 2002: 85-91).
To this day, there are significant conflicts arising over rights to hunt and fish on tribal
lands without a state permit. In November 2013 a federal judge dismissed charges
against five individuals charged with a major crime for exercising treaty rights. The
State of Minnesota currently ignores many treaty rights for American Indians both on-
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and off-reservation. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, and some tribal agents conducted a criminal investigation, known as
Operation Squarehook, indicting more than 30 people in tribal, county, state, and
federal court in April 2013 (Niijii Radio). During my time in the field, I met Bob
Shimek, who was active in Operation Square Hook, at a park in Detroit Lakes to discuss
the treaties and food sovereignty. Although we arrived well before the sun set, I
watched as it disappeared below the horizon as we talked. The full moon rose over the
lake while Shimek spoke articulately about the interconnectedness of food and
spirituality, the creation story, and the treaties. He continued on, passionately telling me
the intricate history of the largest and most influential federal legal battles of native
judicial history. After a while, he told me that he was expecting a call from their lawyer
in St. Paul the next day regarding Operation Square Hook. I was baffled that the battle
that began two years earlier on Lake Bemidji was still being disputed with the federal
government. This fight wasn’t just for the sake of legality under the law, but a fight for
food.
After some time, Bob said,
All of this is food sovereignty. They (the legal battles) were ensuring the
right to protect and reaffirm our existence. They were recognizing those
relationships – that was what those treaties were about – reserving food
sovereignty into the future. Steps are being taken to get back all of those
violated treaty rights (Shimek: Interviewed 4.08.2014).
Even after some 200 years, the battle for land and rights is still being waged against
American Indians. It is a less violent and apparent fight, one that takes place behind the
closed doors of a courtroom, but the influence of the state on reservations across the
nation is still very much alive. Yet the conflicts between the groups are no longer a
one-sided fight. Bands across Minnesota are exercising their constitutional treaty rights
and agency- gaining empowerment and resisting marginalization. All of this occurred
due to the desires of the Ojibwe people to regain their right to access culturally
appropriate food.
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5.2 Using Places to Create Spaces
This silent fight with the state to uphold the legal rights reserved to land and food has
had an impact on the physical and spiritual places and spaces in Ojibwe society. In this
section, I would like to draw attention to geographical place and the creation of positive
spaces through projects. Andrea Cornwall’s concept of space is very useful in achieving
this. But first, I must acknowledge place and the impact it has on the creation of space.
It is important to recognize physical geographic place within Minnesotan reservations.
Places can be both negative and positive. Positive places are the sacred grounds of the
past. They seem to hold in them tribal ideals and respect. Throughout Ojibwe history,
place has been an inherent aspect of language and being. Place, whether it be on the
shores of Lake Superior or the inland woods of Northern Minnesota, is sacred. Earlier in
this work, I noted a story of the sacred collective spirit of place. The land is not merely
a home but the place of ancestors, a place of connectivity and spirituality. Wisuri and
Peacock note the early beginnings of the Ojibwe homelands.
There is some comfort that we have always been in the places that we now
call home. Many of the stories that explain our migrations to these
contemporary places remind us that we may have been here once before, in
a time now hidden somewhere in our ancestral memory. We do know that
much of contemporary Ojibwe country was covered with a sheet of ice
several miles thick nearly twelve thousand years ago during the last glacial
period. With the retreat of the ice came the return of plants – the trees and
grasses and flowers. Then our elder brothers, the four-leggeds and birds,
called this home (Peacock and Wisuri 2002:22).
As we now know, many of the sacred places of the Ojibwe were lost over the years
since European settlement. Hence the idea that places can hold negative connotations.
These include the facades created by the US government in the form of suburban
housing developments. HUD housing, as we have seen, created artificial barriers to
communal relations, and increased tension amongst others. It has had long lasting
impacts on the structure of the communities in question. In addition, the reservations are
large areas of land with few inhabitants, making the physical space between each large.
I was struck during my time in the field at the great distances I had to drive to get from
one community to another. Most are very small, with fewer than 500 residents living
few and far between with little by way of amenities. Some towns are too small to
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contain a school so children must be bused in to larger cities for their education. This
makes a difficult setting for creating a community.
The reason I focus on negative and positive places is that they set the stage for the
creation of spaces for participation and change. Places are powerful reminders of the
past, and prompt one to think about connections, history, losses and deep emotions.
These reminders allow for the creation of spaces, which combat the ill-feelings
associated with negative created places, as well as encourage the connections and
nostalgia of positive sacred places.
Foucault argues that space is fundamental in any exercise of power (Foucault qtd. in
Cornwall 2004). In the case of Ojibwe communities, it is more about resisting state
power and realizing the power inherent in their own people. Cornwall reflects
Foucault’s statement in this excerpt on the nature of created space:
spaces are dynamic and are never neutral. They are infused with existing
relations of power, interactions within them may come to reproduce rather
than challenge hierarchies and inequalities. That being said, power
relations and governmental actions, in themselves, are always sites of
resistance that produce possibilities for subversion, appropriation and
reconstitution (Cornwall 2004:81).
While her work mainly focuses on diverse invited spaces in development, Cornwall
offers insights into the concept of space in this context too. She begins by
acknowledging some spatial metaphors in contemporary development discourse, which
include terms like “opening up, widening, extending opportunities, deepening”
(Cornwall 2004:77). These terms are used in the projects of the Ojibwe, offering the
concepts up to describe reconnecting people to the land, and engagement community
members within the projects of food. She describes what she calls a continuum of
spaces, ranging from closed spaces on one end of the spectrum, which occur behind
closed doors with limited players, to invited spaces which include creating new spaces
for participation. These she describes as created spaces, which are held by less
powerful actors from or against the power-holders. Cornwall refers to these spaces as
‘organic’, as they emerge out of common concerns or identities, or as a result of social
mobilization, for instance around identity or issue based concerns (Cornwall qtd. in
Gaventa 2004:35).
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These organic spaces come in many different forms, some simply constructed
opportunities for ‘the people’ or their representatives to come together. They might
involve more complex multi-stakeholder institutions involving representatives from
civil society, the private sector, government, donors, or they may be popular spaces,
those arenas in which like-minded people come together.
A gamut of cultural, social, historical, and political contextual factors are
all tangled together in shaping the boundaries of what is possible in any
given social encounter within invited spaces (Fraser qtd. in Cornwall 83).
The spaces I encountered during my work were diverse and consisted of invited spaces
both of diverse interest groups of like-minded individuals. In the realm of organic
spaces of like-minded people, Dream of Wild Health invites those who are interested in
their cultural roots, and consists mainly of native peoples and non-Natives with some
background in sustainable agriculture and Native culture. Dream of Wild Health creates
an organic space that encourages youth and their families to explore cooking and
growing foods, testing new flavors, and developing relationships with elders. This space
reflects the significance of place, giving city dwellers the room to get their hands dirty
and soak in the natural surroundings. This space is spiritual as well, exposing families to
Indigenous ceremony and the sacred ideals of Native peoples.
On the other hand, I observed more diverse spaces with vastly different stakeholders
and mindsets, such as the spaces created with regard to treaty rights and legislative
action. Legal battles such as Operation Squarehook bring together groups that would
ordinarily not interact, including politicians, fish and game officers, lawyers, concerned
citizens, activists and scholars. Again, place is important. The lakes in question hold
historical and cultural value to the Ojibwe who have fished and trapped on them for
centuries. This fact brings about including voice, empowerment and marginalization
become relevant. On the reservations, Ojibwe leaders shape the space, thus impacting
the power dynamics it holds - those who are powerful off the reservations may hold less
power on them due to the fact that they lack the historical sense of place. This may
impact which actors voices are heard and acknowledged within the projects (Cornwall
2004:84). White Earth Land Recovery Project creates invited spaces aimed at
motivating people to become stakeholders in the broader fight to regain land and rights.
The foodshed mapping brought together a diverse group of people and gave community
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members a chance to donate knowledge of their neighbors and landscape, in turn
providing the information necessary to progress self-sufficiency. Seeing teachers,
members of the tribal government, farmers, and activists sitting together and discussing
where the best place to harvest and process wild fruits was encouraging. They weren’t
talking about complicated policies or how to cooperate – they weren’t using political
rhetoric – they were talking about food. They were reminiscing about their family root
cellars, about whether or not the Smiths still had chickens or if they’d had to sell, about
their grandparents’ favorite ricing lake, and last year’s sugarbushing season. This was a
space defined by the Ojibwe. I, as an urban dweller and non-Native, had less say within
this space. Despite this, the room was full of positive energy due to the fact that
everyone could relate to the importance of food. Food is a universal communicator,
forming the means to create diverse spaces of connection. It is a tangible force that
inspires participation and empowerment.
5.3 Extending Opportunities: New Modes of
Participation
The creation of spaces and acknowledgement of places are vital aspects of participation
in the Ojibwe projects of food. Without significant places to form spaces of motivation,
empowerment, resistance and communication, participation would not exist. This
section will address participation as the end result of the spaces created by the
movement. I will use John Gaventa’s ideas of participatory governance to direct this
section. Participation, he states, is the way in which people exercise a voice through
new forms of inclusion, consultation, and or mobilization designed to inform and to
influence larger institutions and policies (Gaventa 2004:27). Ojibwe communities are
achieving this through community gatherings and non-profits, meeting such as the
Toxic Taters and the foodshed mapping. The Ojibwe are confronting past injustices and
the state through creating spaces for participation, which in many cases represents a
positive effort. Yet there are some issues with participation that need to be addressed.
Spaces created by outsiders for the purpose of public engagement often lack
information about the norms and goals of the community. Cleaver underlines the
contradictions of participation in her paper, “Paradoxes of Participation” (Cleaver
1999). She states that in development studies, participation is often separated into two
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arguments; participation for efficiency, and participation for empowerment, yet in both
cases, these are ill defined goals that often lack culturally appropriate means of
achieving them. I observed similar misgivings with participation while in the field.
Simone Senogles, of the International Environmental Network and creator of the film,
“Regaining Food Sovereignty,” spoke with me about the recent Native Health Summit,
the issues with participation, and the importance of community led efforts and
empowerment.
When grassroots efforts start taking off, money comes behind them and
funding and then other people get involved because it’s the newest thing.
There is a new research group up here that is, in theory, doing good things,
but it’s important to remember that Native communities have been
researched up the whazoo. A lot of times, it is very intrusive and external
and not for the benefit of native people and it’s sometimes exploitive. I like
the idea that this group is staying up here, but they were talking about
doing a pre-summit meeting on food. The organizers were two non-native
professional men who I had never seen at any of our meetings or anything
and who were making an agenda talking about tradition and food. My take
on that is that if we’re going to talk about food sovereignty in Native
communities, it has to go hand in hand with empowerment and
decolonization and that means leadership from within the community…
For me that really matters. Otherwise the assumption is that we don’t know
how to eat well – the assumption is that if you just teach us to eat well,
we’ll be fine. But we know how, it’s just that there are so many complex
issues that prevent it and that we’ve been so disconnected from all those
things that make us healthy. It seems to me to completely defeat the
purpose to have people act paternalistic about our issues. It’s important to
keep in mind the power structures that are already in place (Senogles:
Interviewed 7.15.2014).
Simone pointed out some of the common issues with participatory methods of
governance and the creation of spaces. She noted that if efforts to revitalize traditional
food systems are to succeed, they have to be done by the communities in question. She
acknowledged the disregard for Indigenous knowledge and disrespect for culturally
appropriate means of communicating. While most of the work being undertaken within
Ojibwe food sovereignty is motivated by community members, there is still intervention
by non-Natives. This has an impact on the space created for the movement, potentially
leading to a paternalistic atmosphere and a less vocal community. Cleaver notes that in
order to combat this in participatory efforts, a more dynamic vision of participation is
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needed. One that incorporates social networks, recognizes disperse and contingent
power relations, and the exclusionary as well as inclusionary nature of participation
(Cleaver 1999:609).
Gaventa has made an effort to address this need through the findings in his chapter,
“Towards Participatory Governance.” He finds several challenges that point to the need
for citizen engagement and participatory transformations (Gaventa 2004:25). First, the
need to conceptualize participation as an act of citizenship and a right, not simply an
invitation from the beneficiaries. Gaventa states that continuums of power must be
examined – how are the spaces for participation created? Who benefits from them?
Who has a seat at the table? Lastly, he notes that voices within existing power structures
must be receptive to community driven efforts. In the case of the Ojibwe, this would
mean for example, that the DNR, as well as state and federal governments would be
open to constructive discussion about treaty rights without the involvement of the court
system. This could begin a time of positive interchange and healing between those who
have been at odds for generations.
It is clear that there are positive and negative aspects of participation, particularily in
situations that present a significant difference in power formations. The past efforts
made by non-Native researchers and organizers, has often been seen as paternalistic.
For this reason, Ojiwe communities are taking charge, forming their own projects and
spaces for conversation and empowerment. With the recommendations put forward by
Gaventa in mind, it is clear that the projects and efforts of the Ojibwe are bigger than
community ventures undertaken for individual desires. Rather they are creating a base
for new structures of empowerment and participation that considers their past
relationships with the state.
5.4 All Things Considered
In this chapter, I have explored the concept of the state and the ways in which it is
visible in Ojibwe communities. Beginning with seemingly benign examples such as the
HUD housing projects and commodity food program and ending with advert legal
battles between tribal efforts and the state, the ways in which negative places were
formed has been made clear. From there, I moved to the connections of place to space,
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redirecting the outlook to positive created spaces for change and participation. As
Shimek noted, the fights that took place with the state were about reaffirming Ojibwe
existence and recognizing the relationship between traditional foods and legal rights.
While fighting a silent battle with the state against the ills of the past, the Ojibwe are
drawing upon their cultural roots to create new self-reliant spaces for the future. They
are finding strength in their inherited sacred places and using them as motivation to
encourage participation. Despite participation’s shortcomings, it is clear after
conversations such as the one I had with Simone Senogles that the Indigenous food
sovereignty movement understands the steps that must be taken to encourage
community-based positive projects of food. She stated that food sovereignty in native
communities must go hand in hand with empowerment, and decolonization, meaning
leadership from the inside and self-sufficiency. This is the horizon of the future.
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6 Conclusions
This work was an attempt to address the losses of the Ojibwe and their efforts to regain
Native sovereignty, and culturally appropriate means of self-sufficiency. By now, the
relationship between the Ojibwe food sovereignty movement and the progress
communities are making to move from spaces of loss to centers of engagement,
participation, and self-determination has been made clear. Throughout the past chapter,
I explained the multiple faces of the state and the power structures visible on the
reservation. The existence of the state and its impacts define and create the structure
and space for resistance and empowerment in Native communities. I considered the
concept of negative and positive places and the ability they are having in shaping new
spaces. From there, I moved on to the notion of participation within these created
spaces. While it can be said that American Indians are disadvantaged; many
communities face serious economic, health and societal issues, they are also thriving in
their ability to create participatory spaces. Without created spaces such as the foodshed
mapping, Dream of Wild Health, and dinner tables set with good conversation in mind,
members of the community would lack the ability to voice their concerns, ideas, and
reminisce about the past. As Simone Senogles mentioned, food sovereignty must go
hand in hand with community leadership and empowerment. Now, Reservations across
the state are exercising their sovereignty.
The Native peoples of the United States were confronted with a fragmentation of their
cultures, a loss of the vital relations that shaped their understanding of the world. Yet
more recently, they have been able to acknowledge their past and current realities and
instill balance, holism, resistance and respect into their community members using food.
The food sovereignty movement presents a tangible and inclusive means of regaining
Native sovereignty, so long hidden under the rule of the US government. It is an
intricate balance of confrontation and regeneration using traditional means.
As Ortner has argued oppositional forms of agency cannot exist without a power of
dominating force to resist against. This explains the intentionality and mission of the
grassroots efforts I have described throughout this work; the ever-present colonial
forces within Ojibwe communities are being combated and resisted. Dream of Wild
Health is achieving this through softer projects of agency, offering a sacred place to
98
reconnect with elders and the land while enjoying new gastronomical experiences.
White Earth Land Recovery Project uses the harder forms of agency and resistance by
creating invited spaces aimed at motivating people to become stakeholders in the
broader fight to address political, environmental, economic, and social concerns. The
foodshed mapping brought together members of diverse groups, some with little
knowledge of the issues and a yearning to learn, others with centuries of traditional
knowledge of local foods passed down to them through the generations. In both cases,
the attendees contributed to a productive and positive discussion aimed at progressing
self-sufficiency. I never ceased to be amazed that all of the conversations and
relationships formed in these spaces were created around and through food. Whether for
political and economic gains or simply to educate children and their parents about the
best way to cook squash, these are the projects of food. They are aimed at revitalizing
different aspects of Ojibwe culture and creating new paradigms within the realms of
native sovereignty, rights and justice, as well as self-reliance and sufficiency.
The themes heard time and time again recalled notions of strengthening, restoring, and
reviving Indigenous culture. Within the Ojibwe food sovereignty movement, this meant
recognizing the sacred relationships inherent in their understanding of the past, present
and future. This connectedness sheds light on the power of food as a communicator in
Indigenous communities. Food holds in it the ceremonies, practices, taboos, and oral
traditions of the past bringing them forward into the present.
This begins with seeds, the sacred witnesses to the past and the food knowledge passed
from generation to generation. Like Cora Baker, the seed saver, who prayed that her
seeds and connection to the past would be protected and handed down allowing the next
generation to benefit from her gifts. I used the example of wild rice to exemplify this
point and to draw attention to the essential economic, symbolic, and emotional
significance of food. Food is both a connection to the spiritual and the cultural while
being a gateway to rejuvenation and innovation. Harvesting, processing and eating wild
rice brings about notions of pride, heritage, and a connectedness to the land and those
who came before. This, as Munn put it in the words of the Apache, brings about a sense
of lived history, as though standing in the tracks of one’s ancestors.
Whether listening to the stories of loss and triumph while weeding a garden, processing
honey, watching children picking vegetables with their parents, or eating freshly caught
99
trout and listening to the realities of life – it is clear that food is an active shaper. It is
the ever present tie that keeps these communities bound together. It has always been
there, sometimes visible, sometimes dormant and forgotten, but it is present. Slowly,
communities are unearthing their roots, allowing them to guide the way to a new future.
After finishing this work, it is clear that food is not simply a means of sustenance. Wild
rice is not simply a grain, and the seeds of ancient squash and maize are not saved and
regrown simply for their fruits. The traditional foods of the Ojibwe people hold sacred
in them their past relationships to the land and their ancestors, their present fight for
communities, and their hopes for a self- reliant future. The Ojibwe food sovereignty
movement, which is gaining more and more clout across stakeholder groups, is
providing the structure necessary to communicate new ideas to the state of Minnesota
and beyond.
100
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